304 results on '"Quattrochi, Dale"'
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2. Scale in Remote Sensing and GIS
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Goodchild, Michael F., primary and Quattrochi, Dale A., additional
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- 2023
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3. Epilog
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Quattrochi, Dale A., primary and Goodchild, Michael F., additional
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- 2023
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4. Introduction
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Goodchild, Michael F., primary and Quattrochi, Dale A., additional
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- 2023
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5. Remote sensing and energy balance modeling of urban climate variability across a semi-arid megacity
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Wetherley, Erin B., Roberts, Dar A., Tague, Christina L., Jones, Charles, Quattrochi, Dale A., and McFadden, Joseph P.
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- 2021
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6. Climate Change in the Southeast USA: Executive Summary
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Ingram, Keith T., Carter, Lynne, Dow, Kirstin, Anderson, Julie, Asseng, Senthold, Hopkinson, Charles, Konrad, Charles, McNulty, Steven, Mitchell, Kenneth, Moody, Kevin, Quattrochi, Dale, Schramm, Paul, Sun, Ge, Swann, LaDon, Ingram, Keith T., editor, Dow, Kirstin, editor, Carter, Lynne, editor, Anderson, Julie, editor, and Sommer, Eleanor K., Book Editor
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- 2013
- Full Text
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7. Climate Interactions with the Built Environment in the Southeast USA
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Quattrochi, Dale, Dow, Kirstin, Gaffney, Jeff, Long, Pat, McNulty, Steve, Shepherd, Marshall, Shuford, Scott, Stone, Brian, Ingram, Keith T., editor, Dow, Kirstin, editor, Carter, Lynne, editor, Anderson, Julie, editor, and Sommer, Eleanor K., Book Editor
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Climate Adaptations in the Southeast USA
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Brosius, Ashley, Diaz, Ernesto, Durbrow, Rick, Evans, Rhonda, Fauver, Stephanie, Hayden, Tim, Howard, Bob, Jacobs, Kasey, Landers, Glenn, McNulty, Steve, Nicholson, Janine, Quattrochi, Dale, Rimer, Linda, Shuford, Scott, Stiles, Skip, Terando, Adam, Ingram, Keith T., editor, Dow, Kirstin, editor, Carter, Lynne, editor, Anderson, Julie, editor, and Sommer, Eleanor K., Book Editor
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- 2013
- Full Text
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9. Estimating ground-level PM2.5 concentrations in the Southeastern United States using MAIAC AOD retrievals and a two-stage model
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Hu, Xuefei, Waller, Lance A., Lyapustin, Alexei, Wang, Yujie, Al-Hamdan, Mohammad Z., Crosson, William L., Estes, Maurice G., Jr., Estes, Sue M., Quattrochi, Dale A., Puttaswamy, Sweta Jinnagara, and Liu, Yang
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- 2014
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10. Quantitative Spatial Analysis of Remotely Sensed Imagery
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Lam, Nina, Emerson, Charles, Quattrochi, Dale, Janelle, Donald G., editor, Warf, Barney, editor, and Hansen, Kathy, editor
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- 2004
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11. Using Land Cover Data to Characterize Living Environments of Geocoded Addresses: Estes et al. Respond
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Estes,, Maurice G., Al-Hamdan, Mohammad Z., Crosson, William, Estes, Sue M., Quattrochi, Dale, Kent, Shia, and McClure, Leslie Ain
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- 2010
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12. Use of Remotely Sensed Data to Evaluate the Relationship between Living Environment and Blood Pressure
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Estes, Maurice G., Al-Hamdan, Mohammad Z., Crosson, William, Estes, Sue M., Quattrochi, Dale, Kent, Shia, and McClure, Leslie Ain
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- 2009
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13. Urban Heat Wave Hazard Assessment
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Quattrochi, Dale A, Jedlovec, Gary, Meyer, Paul J, LaFontaine, Frank J, and Crane, Dakota L
- Subjects
Meteorology And Climatology - Abstract
Heat waves are the largest cause of environment-related deaths globally. On average, over 6,000 people in the United States alone are hospitalized each summer due to excessive heat. Key elements leading to these disasters are elevated humidity and the urban heat island effect, which act together to increase apparent temperature and amplify the effects of a heat wave. Urban demographics and socioeconomic factors also play a role in determining individual risk. Currently, advisories of impending heat waves are often too generalized, with limited or no spatial variability over urban regions. This frequently contributes to a lack of specific response on behalf of the population. A goal of this project is to develop a product that has the potential to provide more specific heat wave guidance invoking greater awareness and action.
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- 2016
14. Using Landsat, MODIS, and a Biophysical Model to Evaluate LST in Urban Centers
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Al-Hamdan, Mohammad Z, Quattrochi, Dale A, Bounoua, Lahouari, Lachir, Asia, and Zhang, Ping
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Earth Resources And Remote Sensing - Abstract
In this paper, we assessed and compared land surface temperature (LST) in urban centers using data from Landsat, MODIS, and the Simple Biosphere model (SiB2). We also evaluated the sensitivity of the models LST to different land cover types, fractions (percentages), and emissivities compared to reference points derived from Landsat thermal data. This was demonstrated in three climatologically- and morphologically-different cities of Atlanta, GA, New York, NY, and Washington, DC. Our results showed that in these cities SiB2 was sensitive to both the emissivity and the land cover type and fraction, but much more sensitive to the latter. The practical implications of these results are rather significant since they imply that the SiB2 model can be used to run different scenarios for evaluating urban heat island (UHI) mitigation strategies. This study also showed that using detailed emissivities per land cover type and fractions from Landsat-derived data caused a convergence of the model results towards the Landsat-derived LST for most of the studied cases. This study also showed that SiB2 LSTs are closer in magnitude to Landsat-derived LSTs than MODIS-derived LSTs. It is important, however, to emphasize that both Landsat and MODIS LSTs are not direct observations and, as such, do not represent a ground truth. More studies will be needed to compare these results to in situ LST data and provide further validation.
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- 2016
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15. High Spatial, Temporal, and Spectral Resolution Instruments for Modeling Monitoring Urban Areas
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Quattrochi, Dale and Luvall, Jeff
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Earth Resources And Remote Sensing - Published
- 2016
16. Impacts of Extreme Events on Human Health
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Bell, Jesse E, Herring, Stephanie C, Jantarasami, Lesley, Adrianopoli, Carl, Benedict, Kaitlin, Conlon, Kathryn, Escobar, Vanessa, Hess, Jeremy, Luvall, Jeffrey, Garcia-Pando, Carlos Perez, Quattrochi, Dale, Runkle, Jennifer, and Schreck, Carl J., III
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Meteorology And Climatology ,Life Sciences (General) - Abstract
Increased Exposure to Extreme Events Key Finding 1: Health impacts associated with climate-related changes in exposure to extreme events include death, injury, or illness; exacerbation of underlying medical conditions; and adverse effects on mental health[High Confidence]. Climate change will increase exposure risk in some regions of the United States due to projected increases in the frequency and/or intensity of drought, wildfires, and flooding related to extreme precipitation and hurricanes [Medium Confidence].Disruption of Essential Infrastructure Key Finding 2: Many types of extreme events related to climate change cause disruption of infrastructure, including power, water, transportation, and communication systems, that are essential to maintaining access to health care and emergency response services and safeguarding human health [High Confidence].Vulnerability to Coastal Flooding Key Finding 3: Coastal populations with greater vulnerability to health impacts from coastal flooding include persons with disabilities or other access and functional needs, certain populations of color, older adults, pregnant women and children, low-income populations, and some occupational groups [High Confidence].Climate change will increase exposure risk to coastal flooding due to increases in extreme precipitation and in hurricane intensity and rainfall rates, as well as sea level rise and the resulting increases in storm surge.
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- 2016
17. Meteorological Factors Limit Aedes Aegypti Longevity and Dengue Virus Transmission in the Sonoran Desert
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Morin, Cory and Quattrochi, Dale A
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Life Sciences (General) ,Meteorology And Climatology - Published
- 2016
18. The Need for a Lexicon of Scale Terms in Integrating Remote Sensing Data with Geographic Information Systems.
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Quattrochi, Dale A.
- Abstract
Maintains that the concept of scale is fundamental to geography, yet the definitions for scale and other spatial terms are confusing to researchers in other spatial science disciplines. Provides a terminology of scale that can be used for a multidisciplinary lexicon of accepted scaling terms. (CFR)
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- 1993
19. The impact of distinct anthropogenic and vegetation features on urban warming
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Myint, Soe W., Wentz, Elizabeth A., Brazel, Anthony J., and Quattrochi, Dale A.
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- 2013
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20. Global Urban Observation and Information: GEO’s Effort to Address the Impacts of Human Settlements
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Weng, Qihao, primary, Esch, Thomas, additional, Gamba, Paolo, additional, Quattrochi, Dale, additional, and Xian, George, additional
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- 2014
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21. Thermal Infrared Remote Sensing For Analysis of Landscape Ecological Processes: Current Insights and Trends
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Quattrochi, Dale A., primary and Luvall, Jeffrey C., additional
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- 2014
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22. Modeled Forecasts of Dengue Fever in San Juan, PR Using NASA Satellite Enhanced Weather Forecasts
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Morin, Cory, Quattrochi, Dale, Zavodsky, Bradley, and Case, Jonathan
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Meteorology And Climatology - Abstract
Dengue virus is transmitted between humans and mosquitoes of the genus Aedes and causes approximately 96 million cases of disease (dengue fever) each year (Bhatet al. 2013). Symptoms of dengue fever include fever, headache, nausea, vomiting, and eye, muscle and joint pain (CDC). More sever manifestations such as abdominal pain, bleeding from nose and gums, vomiting of blood, and clammy skin occur in rare cases of dengue hemorrhagic fever (CDC). Dengue fever occurs throughout tropical and sub-tropical regions worldwide, however, the geographical range and size of epidemics is increasing. Weather and climate are drivers of dengue virus transmission dynamics (Morin et al. 2013) by affecting mosquito proliferation and the virus extrinsic incubation period (i.e. required time for the virus to replicate and disseminate within the mosquito before it can retransmit the virus).
- Published
- 2015
23. Linking NASA Environmental Data with a National Public Health Cohort Study and a CDC on-line System to Enhance Public Health Decision Making
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Al-Hamdan, Mohammad Z, Crosson, William L, Estes, Maury, Estes, Sue, Hemmings, Sarah, Quattrochi, Dale, Wade, Gina, McClure, Leslie, Kent, Shia, Economou, Sigrid, and Puckett, Mark
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Earth Resources And Remote Sensing ,Environment Pollution ,Life Sciences (General) - Published
- 2015
24. Health and Environment Linked for Information Exchange in Atlanta (HELIX-Atlanta)
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Al-Hamdan, Mohammad Z, Crosson, William L, Estes, Maury, Estes, Sue, Limaye, Ashutosh, Quattrochi, Dale, Rickman, Doug, Sinclair, Amber, Tolsma, Dennis, Qualters, Judy, Adeniyi, Kafayat, and Niskar, Amanda
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Statistics And Probability ,Life Sciences (General) ,Documentation And Information Science ,Environment Pollution - Published
- 2015
25. Environmental Public Health Applications Using Remotely Sensed Data
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Al-Hamdan, Mohammad Z, Crosson, William L, Estes, Maury, Estes, Sue, Hemmings, Sarah, Limaye, Ashutosh, Luvall, Jeffrey, Quattrochi, Dale, Rickman, Douglas, and Wade, Gina
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Life Sciences (General) ,Earth Resources And Remote Sensing ,Environment Pollution - Published
- 2015
26. Spatial Disparities in Dengue Risk Along the US-Mexico Border
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Morin, Cory, Monaghan, Andrew, Ernst, Kacey, Crosson, William, and Quattrochi, Dale
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Meteorology And Climatology - Published
- 2015
27. Simulated Transmission of the Dengue Virus Across the US-Mexico Border Using Remotely Sensed and Ground Based Weather Data
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Morin, Cory and Quattrochi, Dale
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Life Sciences (General) ,Meteorology And Climatology - Published
- 2015
28. Municipality Level Simulations of Dengue Fever Incidence in Puerto Rico Using Ground Based and Remotely Sensed Climate Data
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Quattrochi, Dale A and Morin, Cory
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Meteorology And Climatology - Abstract
Dengue fever (DF) is caused by a virus transmitted between humans and Aedes genus mosquitoes through blood feeding. In recent decades incidence of the disease has drastically increased in the tropical Americas, culminating with the Pan American outbreak in 2010 which resulted in 1.7 million reported cases. In Puerto Rico dengue is endemic, however, there is significant inter‐annual, intraannual, and spatial variability in case loads. Variability in climate and the environment, herd immunity and virus genetics, and demographic characteristics may all contribute to differing patterns of transmission both spatially and temporally. Knowledge of climate influences on dengue incidence could facilitate development of early warning systems allowing public health workers to implement appropriate transmission intervention strategies. In this study, we simulate dengue incidence in several municipalities in Puerto Rico using population and meteorological data derived from ground based stations and remote sensing instruments. This data was used to drive a process based model of vector population development and virus transmission. Model parameter values for container composition, vector characteristics, and incubation period were chosen by employing a Monte Carlo approach. Multiple simulations were performed for each municipality and the results were compared with reported dengue cases. The best performing simulations were retained and their parameter values and meteorological input were compared between years and municipalities. Parameter values varied by municipality and year illustrating the complexity and sensitivity of the disease system. Local characteristics including the natural and built environment impact transmission dynamics and produce varying responses to meteorological conditions.
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- 2015
29. Global Urban Observation (I): International Collaboration Opportunities: NASA GEO Subtask SB-04
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Quattrochi, Dale A and Al-Hamdan, Mohammad
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Earth Resources And Remote Sensing - Published
- 2015
30. Relationships Between Excessive Heat and Daily Mortality over the Coterminous United States
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Crosson, Bill, Al-Hamdan, Mohammad, Estes, Maury, Estes, Sue, and Quattrochi, Dale
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Meteorology And Climatology ,Life Sciences (General) - Published
- 2015
31. Assessing Disparities of Dengue Virus Transmission Risk across the US-Mexican Border Using a Climate Driven Vector-Epidemiological Model
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Morin, Cory, Monaghan, Andrew, Quattrochi, Dale, Crosson, William, Hayden, Mary, and Ernst, Kacey
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Aerospace Medicine - Abstract
Dengue fever is a mosquito‐borne viral disease reemerging throughout much of the tropical Americas. Dengue virus transmission is explicitly influenced by climate and the environment through its primary vector, Aedes aegypti. Temperature regulates Ae. aegypti development, survival, and replication rates as well as the incubation period of the virus within the mosquito. Precipitation provides water for many of the preferred breeding habitats of the mosquito, including buckets, old tires, and other places water can collect. Although transmission regularly occurs along the border region in Mexico, dengue virus transmission in bordering Arizona has not occurred. Using NASA's TRMM (Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission) satellite for precipitation input and Daymet for temperature and supplemental precipitation input, we modeled dengue transmission along a US‐Mexico transect using a dynamic dengue transmission model that includes interacting vector ecology and epidemiological components. Model runs were performed for 5 cities in Sonora, Mexico and southern Arizona. Employing a Monte Carlo approach, we performed ensembles of several thousands of model simulations in order to resolve the model uncertainty arising from using different combinations of parameter values that are not well known. For cities with reported dengue case data, the top model simulations that best reproduced dengue case numbers were retained and their parameter values were extracted for comparison. These parameter values were used to run simulations in areas where dengue virus transmission does not occur or where dengue fever case data was unavailable. Additional model runs were performed to reveal how changes in climate or parameter values could alter transmission risk along the transect. The relative influence of climate variability and model parameters on dengue virus transmission is assessed to help public health workers prepare location specific infection prevention strategies.
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- 2015
32. Relationships Between Excessive Heat and Daily Mortality over the Coterminous U.S
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Crosson, William L, Al-Hamdan, Mohammad Z, Estes, Maury G., Jr, Estes, Sue M, and Quattrochi, Dale A
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Life Sciences (General) ,Geosciences (General) - Abstract
In the United States, extreme heat is the most deadly weather-related hazard. In the face of a warming climate and urbanization, it is very likely that extreme heat events (EHEs) will become more common and more severe in the U.S. Using National Land Data Assimilation System (NLDAS) meteorological reanalysis data, we have developed several measures of extreme heat to enable assessments of the impacts of heat on public health over the coterminous U.S. These measures include daily maximum and minimum air temperatures, daily maximum heat indices and a new heat stress variable called Net Daily Heat Stress (NDHS) that gives an integrated measure of heat stress (and relief) over the course of a day. All output has been created on the NLDAS 1/8 degree (approximately 12 km) grid and aggregated to the county level, which is the preferred geographic scale of analysis for public health researchers. County-level statistics have been made available through the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) via the Wide-ranging Online Data for Epidemiologic Research (WONDER) system. We have examined the relationship between excessive heat events, as defined in eight different ways from the various daily heat metrics, and heat-related and all-cause mortality defined in CDC's National Center for Health Statistics 'Multiple Causes of Death 1999-2010' dataset. To do this, we linked daily, county-level heat mortality counts with EHE occurrence based on each of the eight EHE definitions by region and nationally for the period 1999-2010. The objectives of this analysis are to determine (1) whether heat-related deaths can be clearly tied to excessive heat events, (2) what time lags are critical for predicting heat-related deaths, and (3) which of the heat metrics correlates best with mortality in each US region. Results show large regional differences in the correlations between heat and mortality. Also, the heat metric that provides the best indicator of mortality varied by region. Results from this research will potentially lead to improvements in our ability to anticipate and mitigate any significant impacts of extreme heat events on health.
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- 2015
33. Methods for characterizing fine particulate matter using ground observations and remotely sensed data: potential use for environmental public health surveillance
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Al-Hamdan, Mohammad Z., Crosson, William L., Limaye, Ashutosh S., Rickman, Douglas L., Quattrochi, Dale A., Estes, Jr., Maurice G., Qualters, Judith R., Sinclair, Amber H., Tolsma, Dennis D., Adeniyi, Kafayat A., and Niskar, Amanda Sue
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Air quality monitoring stations -- Usage -- Environmental aspects -- Measurement -- Methods ,Air quality -- Measurement -- Environmental aspects -- Methods -- Usage ,Environmental monitoring -- Methods -- Usage -- Measurement -- Environmental aspects ,Public health -- Environmental aspects -- Usage -- Measurement -- Methods ,Environmental services industry ,Environmental issues ,Science and technology - Abstract
ABSTRACT This study describes and demonstrates different techniques for surface fitting daily environmental hazards data of particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter less than or equal to 2.5 µm ([PM.sub.2.5]) for [...]
- Published
- 2009
34. Variations in Modeled Dengue Transmission over Puerto Rico Using a Climate Driven Dynamic Model
- Author
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Morin, Cory, Monaghan, Andrew, Crosson, William, Quattrochi, Dale, and Luvall, Jeffrey
- Subjects
Meteorology And Climatology ,Aerospace Medicine - Abstract
Dengue fever is a mosquito‐borne viral disease reemerging throughout much of the tropical Americas. Dengue virus transmission is explicitly influenced by climate and the environment through its primary vector, Aedes aegypti. Temperature regulates Ae. aegypti development, survival, and replication rates as well as the incubation period of the virus within the mosquito. Precipitation provides water for many of the preferred breeding habitats of the mosquito, including buckets, old tires, and other places water can collect. Because of variations in topography, ocean influences and atmospheric processes, temperature and rainfall patterns vary across Puerto Rico and so do dengue virus transmission rates. Using NASA's TRMM (Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission) satellite for precipitation input, ground‐based observations for temperature input, and laboratory confirmed dengue cases reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for parameter calibration, we modeled dengue transmission at the county level across Puerto Rico from 2010‐2013 using a dynamic dengue transmission model that includes interacting vector ecology and epidemiological components. Employing a Monte Carlo approach, we performed ensembles of several thousands of model simulations for each county in order to resolve the model uncertainty arising from using different combinations of parameter values that are not well known. The top 1% of model simulations that best reproduced the reported dengue case data were then analyzed to determine the most important parameters for dengue virus transmission in each county, as well as the relative influence of climate variability on transmission. These results can be used by public health workers to implement dengue control methods that are targeted for specific locations and climate conditions.
- Published
- 2014
35. NASA 2014 The Hyperspectral Infrared Imager (HyspIRI) – science impact of deploying instruments on separate platforms
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Quattrochi, Dale, Mars, John 'Lyle', Prakash, Anupma, Anderson, Martha, Wright, Robert, Veraverbeke, Sander, Turpie, Kevin, and Hook, Simon J
- Abstract
The Hyperspectral Infrared Imager (HyspIRI) mission was recommended for implementation by the 2007 report from the U.S. National Research Council Earth Science and Applications from Space: National Imperatives for the Next Decade and Beyond, also known as the Earth Science Decadal Survey. The HyspIRI mission is science driven and will address a set of science questions identified by the Decadal Survey and broader science community. The mission includes a visible shortwave infrared (VSWIR) imaging spectrometer, a multispectral thermal infrared (TIR) imager and an intelligent payload module (IPM). The IPM enables on-board processing and direct broadcast for those applications with short latency requirements. The science questions are organized as VSWIR-only, TIR-only and Combined science questions, the latter requiring data from both instruments.
- Published
- 2014
36. NASA 2014 The Hyperspectral Infrared Imager (HyspIRI) – science impact of deploying instruments on separate platforms
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Hook, Simon J, Turpie, Kevin, Veraverbeke, Sander, Wright, Robert, Anderson, Martha, Prakash, Anupma, Mars, John 'Lyle', and Quattrochi, Dale
- Published
- 2014
37. NASA 2014 The Hyperspectral Infrared Imager (HyspIRI) - Science Impact of Deploying Instruments on Separate Platforms
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Turpie, Kevin, Veraverbeke, Sander, Wright, Robert, Anderson, Martha, Prakash, Anupma, and Quattrochi, Dale
- Subjects
Instrumentation And Photography - Abstract
The Hyperspectral Infrared Imager (HyspIRI) mission was recommended for implementation by the 2007 report from the U.S. National Research Council Earth Science and Applications from Space: National Imperatives for the Next Decade and Beyond, also known as the Earth Science Decadal Survey. The HyspIRI mission is science driven and will address a set of science questions identified by the Decadal Survey and broader science community. The mission includes a visible shortwave infrared (VSWIR) imaging spectrometer, a multispectral thermal infrared (TIR) imager and an intelligent payload module (IPM). The IPM enables on-board processing and direct broadcast for those applications with short latency requirements. The science questions are organized as VSWIR-only, TIR-only and Combined science questions, the latter requiring data from both instruments. In order to prepare for the mission NASA is undertaking pre-phase A studies to determine the optimum mission implementation, in particular, cost and risk reduction activities. Each year the HyspIRI project is provided with feedback from NASA Headquarters on the pre-phase A activities in the form of a guidance letter which outlines the work that should be undertaken the subsequent year. The 2013 guidance letter included a recommendation to undertake a study to determine the science impact of deploying the instruments from separate spacecraft in sun synchronous orbits with various time separations and deploying both instruments on the International Space Station (ISS). This report summarizes the results from that study. The approach taken was to evaluate the impact on the combined science questions of time separations between the VSWIR and TIR data of <3 minutes, <1 week and a few months as well as deploying both instruments on the ISS. Note the impact was only evaluated for the combined science questions which require data from both instruments (VSWIR and TIR). The study concluded the impact of a separation of <3 minutes was minimal, e.g. if the instruments were on separate platforms that followed each other in a train. The impact of a separation of <1 week was strongly dependent on the question that was being addressed with no impact for some questions and a severe impact for others. The impact of a time separation of several months was severe and in many cases it was no longer possible to answer the sub-question. The impact of deploying the instruments on the ISS which is in a precessive (non-sun synchronous) orbit was also very question dependent, in some cases it was possible to go beyond the original question, e.g. to examine the impact of the diurnal cycle, whereas in other cases the question could not be addressed for example if the question required observations from the polar regions. As part of the study, the participants were asked to estimate, as a percentage, how completely a given sub-question could be answered with 100% indicating the question could be completely answered. These estimations should be treated with caution but nonetheless can be useful in assessing the impact. Averaging the estimates for each of the combined questions the results indicate that 97% of the questions could be answered with a separation of < 3 minutes. With a separation of < 1 week, 67% of the questions could be answered and with a separation of several months only 21% of the questions could be answered.
- Published
- 2014
38. Linking Excessive Heat with Daily Heat-Related Mortality over the Coterminous United States
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Quattrochi, Dale A, Crosson, William L, Al-Hamdan, Mohammad Z, and Estes, Maurice G., Jr
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Meteorology And Climatology - Abstract
In the United States, extreme heat is the most deadly weather-related hazard. In the face of a warming climate and urbanization, which contributes to local-scale urban heat islands, it is very likely that extreme heat events (EHEs) will become more common and more severe in the U.S. This research seeks to provide historical and future measures of climate-driven extreme heat events to enable assessments of the impacts of heat on public health over the coterminous U.S. We use atmospheric temperature and humidity information from meteorological reanalysis and from Global Climate Models (GCMs) to provide data on past and future heat events. The focus of research is on providing assessments of the magnitude, frequency and geographic distribution of extreme heat in the U.S. to facilitate public health studies. In our approach, long-term climate change is captured with GCM outputs, and the temporal and spatial characteristics of short-term extremes are represented by the reanalysis data. Two future time horizons for 2040 and 2090 are compared to the recent past period of 1981- 2000. We characterize regional-scale temperature and humidity conditions using GCM outputs for two climate change scenarios (A2 and A1B) defined in the Special Report on Emissions Scenarios (SRES). For each future period, 20 years of multi-model GCM outputs are analyzed to develop a 'heat stress climatology' based on statistics of extreme heat indicators. Differences between the two future and the past period are used to define temperature and humidity changes on a monthly time scale and regional spatial scale. These changes are combined with the historical meteorological data, which is hourly and at a spatial scale (12 km) much finer than that of GCMs, to create future climate realizations. From these realizations, we compute the daily heat stress measures and related spatially-specific climatological fields, such as the mean annual number of days above certain thresholds of maximum and minimum air temperatures, heat indices, and a new heat stress variable developed as part of this research that gives an integrated measure of heat stress (and relief) over the course of a day. Comparisons are made between projected (2040 and 2090) and past (1990) heat stress statistics. Outputs are aggregated to the county level, which is a popular scale of analysis for public health interests. County-level statistics are made available to public health researchers by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) via the Wide-ranging Online Data for Epidemiologic Research (WONDER) system. This addition of heat stress measures to CDC WONDER allows decision and policy makers to assess the impact of alternative approaches to optimize the public health response to EHEs. Through CDC WONDER, users are able to spatially and temporally query public health and heat-related data sets and create county-level maps and statistical charts of such data across the coterminous U.S.
- Published
- 2014
39. Climate Change Potential Impacts on the Built Environment and Possible Adaptation Strategies
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Quattrochi, Dale A
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Meteorology And Climatology - Abstract
The built environment consists of components that exist at a range of scales from small (e.g., houses, shopping malls) to large (e.g., transportation networks) to highly modified landscapes such as cities. Thus, the impacts of climate change on the built environment may have a multitude of effects on humans and the land. The impact of climate change may be exacerbated by the interaction of different events that singly may be minor, but together may have a synergistic set of impacts that are significant. Also, mechanisms may exist wherein the built environment, particularly in the form of cities, may affect weather and the climate on local and regional scales. Hence, a city may be able to cope with prolonged heat waves, but if this is combined with severe drought, the overall result could be significant or even catastrophic, as accelerating demand for energy to cooling taxes water supplies needed both for energy supply and municipal water needs. This presentation surveys potential climate change impacts on the built environment from the perspective of the National Climate Assessment, and explores adaptation measures that can be employed to mitigate these impacts.
- Published
- 2014
40. Estimating ground-level PM2.5 concentrations in the southeastern U.S. using geographically weighted regression☆
- Author
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Hu, Xuefei, Waller, Lance A., Al-Hamdan, Mohammad Z., Crosson, William L., Estes, Maurice G., Jr., Estes, Sue M., Quattrochi, Dale A., Sarnat, Jeremy A., and Liu, Yang
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Future Extreme Heat Scenarios to Enable the Assessment of Climate Impacts on Public Health over the Coterminous U.S.
- Author
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Quattrochi, Dale A, Crosson, William L, Al-Hamdan, Mohammad Z, and Estes, Maurice G., Jr
- Subjects
Meteorology And Climatology ,Life Sciences (General) - Abstract
In the United States, extreme heat is the most deadly weather-related hazard. In the face of a warming climate and urbanization, which contributes to local-scale urban heat islands, it is very likely that extreme heat events (EHEs) will become more common and more severe in the U.S. This research seeks to provide historical and future measures of climate-driven extreme heat events to enable assessments of the impacts of heat on public health over the coterminous U.S. We use atmospheric temperature and humidity information from meteorological reanalysis and from Global Climate Models (GCMs) to provide data on past and future heat events. The focus of research is on providing assessments of the magnitude, frequency and geographic distribution of extreme heat in the U.S. to facilitate public health studies. In our approach, long-term climate change is captured with GCM outputs, and the temporal and spatial characteristics of short-term extremes are represented by the reanalysis data. Two future time horizons for 2040 and 2090 are compared to the recent past period of 1981- 2000. We characterize regional-scale temperature and humidity conditions using GCM outputs for two climate change scenarios (A2 and A1B) defined in the Special Report on Emissions Scenarios (SRES). For each future period, 20 years of multi-model GCM outputs are analyzed to develop a 'heat stress climatology' based on statistics of extreme heat indicators. Differences between the two future and the past period are used to define temperature and humidity changes on a monthly time scale and regional spatial scale. These changes are combined with the historical meteorological data, which is hourly and at a spatial scale (12 km), to create future climate realizations. From these realizations, we compute the daily heat stress measures and related spatially-specific climatological fields, such as the mean annual number of days above certain thresholds of maximum and minimum air temperatures, heat indices and a new heat stress variable developed as part of this research that gives an integrated measure of heat stress (and relief) over the course of a day. Comparisons are made between projected (2040 and 2090) and past (1990) heat stress statistics. Outputs are aggregated to the county level, which is a popular scale of analysis for public health interests. County-level statistics are made available to public health researchers by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) via the Wideranging Online Data for Epidemiologic Research (WONDER) system. This addition of heat stress measures to CDC WONDER allows decision and policy makers to assess the impact of alternative approaches to optimize the public health response to EHEs. Through CDC WONDER, users are able to spatially and temporally query public health and heat-related data sets and create county-level maps and statistical charts of such data across the coterminous U.S
- Published
- 2013
42. Downscaling MODIS Land Surface Temperature for Urban Public Health Applications
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Al-Hamdan, Mohammad, Crosson, William, Estes, Maurice, Jr, Estes, Sue, Quattrochi, Dale, and Johnson, Daniel
- Subjects
Earth Resources And Remote Sensing - Abstract
This study is part of a project funded by the NASA Applied Sciences Public Health Program, which focuses on Earth science applications of remote sensing data for enhancing public health decision-making. Heat related death is currently the number one weather-related killer in the United States. Mortality from these events is expected to increase as a function of climate change. This activity sought to augment current Heat Watch/Warning Systems (HWWS) with NASA remotely sensed data, and models used in conjunction with socioeconomic and heatrelated mortality data. The current HWWS do not take into account intra-urban spatial variation in risk assessment. The purpose of this effort is to evaluate a potential method to improve spatial delineation of risk from extreme heat events in urban environments by integrating sociodemographic risk factors with estimates of land surface temperature (LST) derived from thermal remote sensing data. In order to further improve the consideration of intra-urban variations in risk from extreme heat, we also developed and evaluated a number of spatial statistical techniques for downscaling the 1-km daily MODerate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) LST data to 60 m using Landsat-derived LST data, which have finer spatial but coarser temporal resolution than MODIS. In this paper, we will present these techniques, which have been demonstrated and validated for Phoenix, AZ using data from the summers of 2000-2006.
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- 2013
43. Development of National Future Extreme Heat Scenario to Enable the Assessment of Climate Impacts on Public Health
- Author
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Quattrochi, Dale A, Cresson, William L, Al-Hamdan, Mohammad Z, and Estes, Maurice G
- Subjects
Meteorology And Climatology - Abstract
The project's emphasis is on providing assessments of the magnitude, frequency and geographic distribution of EHEs to facilitate public health studies. We focus on the daily to weekly time scales on which EHEs occur, not on decadal-scale climate changes. There is, however, a very strong connection between air temperature patterns at the two time scales and long-term climatic changes will certainly alter the frequency of EHEs.
- Published
- 2013
44. How Cities Breathe: Ground-Referenced, Airborne Hyperspectral Imaging Precursor Measurements To Space-Based Monitoring
- Author
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Leifer, Ira, Tratt, David, Quattrochi, Dale, Bovensmann, Heinrich, Gerilowski, Konstantin, Buchwitz, Michael, and Burrows, John
- Subjects
Environment Pollution ,Earth Resources And Remote Sensing - Abstract
Methane's (CH4) large global warming potential (Shindell et al., 2012) and likely increasing future emissions due to global warming feedbacks emphasize its importance to anthropogenic greenhouse warming (IPCC, 2007). Furthermore, CH4 regulation has far greater near-term climate change mitigation potential versus carbon dioxide CO2, the other major anthropogenic Greenhouse Gas (GHG) (Shindell et al., 2009). Uncertainties in CH4 budgets arise from the poor state of knowledge of CH4 sources - in part from a lack of sufficiently accurate assessments of the temporal and spatial emissions and controlling factors of highly variable anthropogenic and natural CH4 surface fluxes (IPCC, 2007) and the lack of global-scale (satellite) data at sufficiently high spatial resolution to resolve sources. Many important methane (and other trace gases) sources arise from urban and mega-urban landscapes where anthropogenic activities are centered - most of humanity lives in urban areas. Studying these complex landscape tapestries is challenged by a wide and varied range of activities at small spatial scale, and difficulty in obtaining up-to-date landuse data in the developed world - a key desire of policy makers towards development of effective regulations. In the developing world, challenges are multiplied with additional political access challenges. As high spatial resolution satellite and airborne data has become available, activity mapping applications have blossomed - i.e., Google maps; however, tap a minute fraction of remote sensing capabilities due to limited (three band) spectral information. Next generation approaches that incorporate high spatial resolution hyperspectral and ultraspectral data will allow detangling of the highly heterogeneous usage megacity patterns by providing diagnostic identification of chemical composition from solids (refs) to gases (refs). To properly enable these next generation technologies for megacity include atmospheric radiative transfer modeling the complex and often aerosol laden, humid, urban microclimates, atmospheric transport and profile monitoring, spatial resolution, temporal cycles (diurnal and seasonal which involve interactions with the surrounding environment diurnal and seasonal cycles) and representative measurement approaches given traffic realities. Promising approaches incorporate contemporaneous airborne remote sensing and in situ measurements, nocturnal surface surveys, with ground station measurement
- Published
- 2013
45. Estimating Ground-Level PM(sub 2.5) Concentrations in the Southeastern United States Using MAIAC AOD Retrievals and a Two-Stage Model
- Author
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Hu, Xuefei, Waller, Lance A, Lyapustin, Alexei, Wang, Yujie, Al-Hamdan, Mohammad Z, Crosson, William L, Estes, Maurice G., Jr, Estes, Sue M, Quattrochi, Dale A, Puttaswamy, Sweta Jinnagara, and Liu, Yang
- Subjects
Environment Pollution ,Earth Resources And Remote Sensing - Abstract
Previous studies showed that fine particulate matter (PM(sub 2.5), particles smaller than 2.5 micrometers in aerodynamic diameter) is associated with various health outcomes. Ground in situ measurements of PM(sub 2.5) concentrations are considered to be the gold standard, but are time-consuming and costly. Satellite-retrieved aerosol optical depth (AOD) products have the potential to supplement the ground monitoring networks to provide spatiotemporally-resolved PM(sub 2.5) exposure estimates. However, the coarse resolutions (e.g., 10 km) of the satellite AOD products used in previous studies make it very difficult to estimate urban-scale PM(sub 2.5) characteristics that are crucial to population-based PM(sub 2.5) health effects research. In this paper, a new aerosol product with 1 km spatial resolution derived by the Multi-Angle Implementation of Atmospheric Correction (MAIAC) algorithm was examined using a two-stage spatial statistical model with meteorological fields (e.g., wind speed) and land use parameters (e.g., forest cover, road length, elevation, and point emissions) as ancillary variables to estimate daily mean PM(sub 2.5) concentrations. The study area is the southeastern U.S., and data for 2003 were collected from various sources. A cross validation approach was implemented for model validation. We obtained R(sup 2) of 0.83, mean prediction error (MPE) of 1.89 micrograms/cu m, and square root of the mean squared prediction errors (RMSPE) of 2.73 micrograms/cu m in model fitting, and R(sup 2) of 0.67, MPE of 2.54 micrograms/cu m, and RMSPE of 3.88 micrograms/cu m in cross validation. Both model fitting and cross validation indicate a good fit between the dependent variable and predictor variables. The results showed that 1 km spatial resolution MAIAC AOD can be used to estimate PM(sub 2.5) concentrations.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Geocarto International-Special Issue on NASA Earth Science Satellite Data for Applications to Public Health
- Author
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Quattrochi, Dale
- Subjects
Earth Resources And Remote Sensing ,Life Sciences (General) - Published
- 2013
47. Summary of the Geocarto International Special Issue on 'NASA Earth Science Satellite Data for Applications to Public Health' to be Published in Early 2014
- Author
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Quattrochi, Dale A
- Subjects
Space Sciences (General) ,Life Sciences (General) - Abstract
At the 2011 Applied Science Public Health review held in Santa Fe, NM, it was announced that Dr. Dale Quattrochi from the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, John Haynes, Program Manager for the Applied Sciences Public Health program at NASA Headquarters, and Sue Estes, Deputy Program Manager for the NASA Applied Sciences Public Health Program located at the Universities Space Research Association (USRA) at the National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) in Huntsville, AL, would edit a special issue of the journal Geocarto International on "NASA Earth Science Satellite Data for Applications to Public Health". This issue would be focused on compiling research papers that use NASA Earth Science satellite data for applications to public health. NASA's Public Health Program concentrates on advancing the realization of societal and economic benefits from NASA Earth Science in the areas of infectious disease, emergency preparedness and response, and environmental health (e.g., air quality). This application area as a focus of the NASA Applied Sciences program, has engaged public health institutions and officials with research scientists in exploring new applications of Earth Science satellite data as an integral part of public health decision- and policy-making at the local, state and federal levels. Of interest to this special issue are papers submitted on are topics such as epidemiologic surveillance in the areas of infectious disease, environmental health, and emergency response and preparedness, national and international activities to improve skills, share data and applications, and broaden the range of users who apply Earth Science satellite data in public health decisions, or related focus areas.. This special issue has now been completed and will be published n early 2014. This talk will present an overview of the papers that will be published in this special Geocarto International issue.
- Published
- 2013
48. Public Health Applications of Remotely-sensed Environmental Datasets for the Conterminous United States
- Author
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Al-Hamdan, Mohammad, Crosson, William, Economou, Sigrid, Estes, Marice Jr, Estes, Sue, Hemmings, Sarah, Kent, Shia, Puckett, Mark, Quattrochi, Dale, and Wade, Gina
- Subjects
Earth Resources And Remote Sensing - Abstract
NASA Marshall Space Flight Center is collaborating with the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) School of Public Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) National Center for Public Health Informatics to address issues of environmental health and enhance public health decision-making using NASA remotely-sensed data and products. The objectives of this study are to develop high-quality spatial data sets of environmental variables, link these with public health data from a national cohort study, and deliver the linked data sets and associated analyses to local, state and federal end-user groups. Three daily environmental data sets were developed for the conterminous U.S. on different spatial resolutions for the period 2003-2008: (1) spatial surfaces of estimated fine particulate matter (PM2.5) exposures on a 10-km grid using the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ground observations and NASA's MODerate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) data; (2) a 1-km grid of Land Surface Temperature (LST) using MODIS data; and (3) a 12-km grid of daily Incoming Solar Radiation (Insolation) and heat-related products using the North American Land Data Assimilation System (NLDAS) forcing data. These environmental data sets were linked with public health data from the UAB REasons for Geographic And Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) national cohort study to determine whether exposures to these environmental risk factors are related to cognitive decline, stroke and other health outcomes. These environmental datasets and the results of the public health linkage analyses will be disseminated to end-users for decision-making through the CDC Wide-ranging Online Data for Epidemiologic Research (WONDER) system and through peer-reviewed publications respectively. The linkage of these data with the CDC WONDER system substantially expands public access to NASA data, making their use by a wide range of decision makers feasible. By successful completion of this research, decision-making activities, including policy-making and clinical decision-making, can be positively affected through utilization of the data products and analyses provided on the CDC WONDER system.
- Published
- 2013
49. Urban Image Classification: Per-Pixel Classifiers, Sub-Pixel Analysis, Object-Based Image Analysis, and Geospatial Methods
- Author
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Myint, Soe W, Mesev, Victor, Quattrochi, Dale, and Wentz, Elizabeth A
- Subjects
Documentation And Information Science ,Earth Resources And Remote Sensing - Abstract
Remote sensing methods used to generate base maps to analyze the urban environment rely predominantly on digital sensor data from space-borne platforms. This is due in part from new sources of high spatial resolution data covering the globe, a variety of multispectral and multitemporal sources, sophisticated statistical and geospatial methods, and compatibility with GIS data sources and methods. The goal of this chapter is to review the four groups of classification methods for digital sensor data from space-borne platforms; per-pixel, sub-pixel, object-based (spatial-based), and geospatial methods. Per-pixel methods are widely used methods that classify pixels into distinct categories based solely on the spectral and ancillary information within that pixel. They are used for simple calculations of environmental indices (e.g., NDVI) to sophisticated expert systems to assign urban land covers. Researchers recognize however, that even with the smallest pixel size the spectral information within a pixel is really a combination of multiple urban surfaces. Sub-pixel classification methods therefore aim to statistically quantify the mixture of surfaces to improve overall classification accuracy. While within pixel variations exist, there is also significant evidence that groups of nearby pixels have similar spectral information and therefore belong to the same classification category. Object-oriented methods have emerged that group pixels prior to classification based on spectral similarity and spatial proximity. Classification accuracy using object-based methods show significant success and promise for numerous urban 3 applications. Like the object-oriented methods that recognize the importance of spatial proximity, geospatial methods for urban mapping also utilize neighboring pixels in the classification process. The primary difference though is that geostatistical methods (e.g., spatial autocorrelation methods) are utilized during both the pre- and post-classification steps. Within this chapter, each of the four approaches is described in terms of scale and accuracy classifying urban land use and urban land cover; and for its range of urban applications. We demonstrate the overview of four main classification groups in Figure 1 while Table 1 details the approaches with respect to classification requirements and procedures (e.g., reflectance conversion, steps before training sample selection, training samples, spatial approaches commonly used, classifiers, primary inputs for classification, output structures, number of output layers, and accuracy assessment). The chapter concludes with a brief summary of the methods reviewed and the challenges that remain in developing new classification methods for improving the efficiency and accuracy of mapping urban areas.
- Published
- 2013
50. It's the Heat AND the Humidity -- Assessment of Extreme Heat Scenarios to Enable the Assessment of Climate Impacts on Public Health
- Author
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Crosson, William L, Al-Hamdan, Mohammad Z, Economou, Sigrid, A, Estes, Maurice G, Estes, Sue M, Puckett, Mark, and Quattrochi, Dale A
- Subjects
Meteorology And Climatology - Abstract
In the United States, extreme heat is the most deadly weather-related hazard. In the face of a warming climate and urbanization, which contributes to local-scale urban heat islands, it is very likely that extreme heat events (EHEs) will become more common and more severe in the U.S. In a NASA-funded project supporting the National Climate Assessment, we are providing historical and future measures of extreme heat to enable assessments of the impacts of heat on public health over the coterminous U.S. We use atmospheric temperature and humidity information from meteorological reanalysis and from Global Climate Models (GCMs) to provide data on past and future heat events. The project s emphasis is on providing assessments of the magnitude, frequency and geographic distribution of extreme heat in the U.S. to facilitate public health studies. In our approach, long-term climate change is captured with GCM output, and the temporal and spatial characteristics of short-term extremes are represented by the reanalysis data. Two future time horizons, 2040 and 2090, are the focus of future assessments; these are compared to the recent past period of 1981-2000. We are characterizing regional-scale temperature and humidity conditions using GCM output for two climate change scenarios (A2 and A1B) defined in the Special Report on Emissions Scenarios (SRES). For each future period, 20 years of multi-model GCM output have been analyzed to develop a heat stress climatology based on statistics of extreme heat indicators. Differences between the two future and past periods have been used to define temperature and humidity changes on a monthly time scale and regional spatial scale. These changes, combined with hourly historical meteorological data at a spatial scale (12 km) much finer than that of GCMs, enable us to create future climate realizations, from which we compute the daily heat stress measures and related spatially-specific climatological fields. These include the mean annual number of days above certain thresholds of maximum and minimum air temperatures, heat indices and a new heat stress variable that gives an integrated measure of heat stress (and relief) over the course of a day. Comparisons are made between projected (2040 and 2090) and past (1990) heat stress statistics. All output is being provided at the 12 km spatial scale and will also be aggregated to the county level, which is a popular scale of analysis for public health researchers. County-level statistics will be made available by our collaborators at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) via the Wide-ranging Online Data for Epidemiologic Research (WONDER) system. CDC WONDER makes the information resources of the CDC available to public health professionals and the general public. This addition of heat stress measures to CDC WONDER will allow decision and policy makers to assess the impact of alternative approaches to optimize the public health response to EHEs. It will also allow public health researchers and policy makers to better include such heat stress measures in the context of national health data available in the CDC WONDER system. The users will be able to spatially and temporally query public health and heat-related data sets and create county-level maps and statistical charts of such data across the coterminous U.S.
- Published
- 2013
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