| Literature DB >> 31918142 |
Tsun-Hsuan Chen1, Yen-Ching Hsu2, Yu-Ting Zeng3, Shih-Chun Candice Lung4, Huey-Jen Su5, Hsing Jasmine Chao6, Chih-Da Wu7.
Abstract
Kriging interpolation and land use regression (LUR) have characterized the spatial variability of long-term nitrogen dioxide (NO2), but there has been little research on combining these two methods to capture small-scale spatial variation. Furthermore, studies predicting NO2 exposure are almost exclusively based on traffic-related variables, which may not be transferable to Taiwan, a typical Asian country with diverse local emission sources, where densely distributed temples and restaurants may be important for NO2 levels. To advance the exposure estimates in Taiwan, a hybrid kriging/LUR model incorporates culture-specific sources as potential predictors. Based on 14-year NO2 observations from 73 monitoring stations across Taiwan, a set of interpolated NO2 values were generated through a leave-one-out ordinary kriging algorithm, and this was included as an explanatory variable in the stepwise LUR procedures. Kriging interpolated NO2 and culture-specific predictors were entered in the final models, which captured 90% and 87% of NO2 variation in annual and monthly resolution, respectively. Results from 10-fold cross-validation and external data verification demonstrate robust performance of the developed models. This study demonstrates the value of incorporating the kriging-interpolated estimates and culture-specific emission sources into the traditional LUR model structure for predicting NO2, which can be particularly useful for Asian countries.Entities:
Keywords: Culture-specific sources; Hybrid kriging/LUR model; Nitrogen dioxide (NO(2)); Spatial-temporal variations
Year: 2019 PMID: 31918142 DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2019.113875
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Pollut ISSN: 0269-7491 Impact factor: 8.071