Predicting within-city spatiotemporal variations in daily median outdoor ultrafine particle number concentrations and size in Montreal and Toronto, Canada

Author:

Venuta Alessya1,Lloyd Marshall1,Ganji Arman2,Xu Junshi2,Simon Leora1,Zhang Mingqian2,Saeedi Milad2,Yamanouchi Shoma2,Lavigne Eric3,Hatzopoulou Marianne2,Weichenthal Scott14

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Occupational Health, McGill University, Montreal, Canada

2. Department of Civil and Mineral Engineering, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada

3. Environmental Health Science Research Bureau, Health Canada, Ottawa, Canada

4. Air Health Science Division, Health Canada, Ottawa, Canada

Abstract

Background: Epidemiological evidence suggests that long-term exposure to outdoor ultrafine particles (UFPs, <0.1 μm) may have important human health impacts. However, less is known about the acute health impacts of these pollutants as few models are available to estimate daily within-city spatiotemporal variations in outdoor UFPs. Methods: Several machine learning approaches (i.e., generalized additive models, random forest models, and extreme gradient boosting) were used to predict daily spatiotemporal variations in outdoor UFPs (number concentration and size) across Montreal and Toronto, Canada using a large database of mobile monitoring measurements. Separate models were developed for each city and all models were evaluated using a 10-fold cross-validation procedure. Results: In total, our models were based on measurements from 12,705 road segments in Montreal and 10,929 road segments in Toronto. Daily median outdoor UFP number concentrations varied substantially across both cities with 1st–99th percentiles ranging from 1389 to 181,672 in Montreal and 2472 to 118,544 in Toronto. Outdoor UFP size tended to be smaller in Montreal (mean [SD]: 34 nm [15]) than in Toronto (mean [SD]: 44 nm [25]). Extreme gradient boosting models performed best and explained the majority of spatiotemporal variations in outdoor UFP number concentrations (Montreal, R 2: 0.727; Toronto, R 2: 0.723) and UFP size (Montreal, R 2: 0.823; Toronto, R 2: 0.898) with slopes close to one and intercepts close to zero for relationships between measured and predicted values. Conclusion: These new models will be applied in future epidemiological studies examining the acute health impacts of outdoor UFPs in Canada’s two largest cities.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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