| Literature DB >> 35400811 |
Ned English1, Chang Zhao1, Kevin L Brown1, Charlie Catlett2, Kathleen Cagney3.
Abstract
Recent advances in computing technologies have enabled the development of low-cost, compact weather and air quality monitors. The U.S. federally funded Array of Things (AoT) project has deployed more than 140 such sensor nodes throughout the City of Chicago. This paper combines a year's worth of AoT sensor data with household data collected from 450 elderly Chicagoans in order to explore the feasibility of using previously unavailable data on local environmental conditions to improve traditional neighborhood research. Specifically, we pilot the use of AoT sensor data to overcome limitations in research linking air pollution to poor physical and mental health and find support for recent findings that exposure to pollutants contributes to both respiratory and dementia-related diseases. We expect that this support will become even stronger as sensing technologies continue to improve and more AoT nodes come online, enabling additional applications to social science research where environmental context matters.Entities:
Keywords: Air Quality; Environmental Exposure; GIS; Health; Neighborhood; Pollution; Sensors
Year: 2020 PMID: 35400811 PMCID: PMC8991303 DOI: 10.1177/0894439320920601
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Sci Comput Rev ISSN: 0894-4393 Impact factor: 4.418