Author
Listed:
- Sam Clifford
- Samantha Low‐Choy
- Mandana Mazaheri
- Farhad Salimi
- Lidia Morawska
- Kerrie Mengersen
Abstract
In environmental monitoring, the ability to obtain high‐quality data across space and time is often limited by the cost of purchasing, deploying and maintaining a large collection of equipment, and the employment of personnel to perform these tasks. An ideal design for a monitoring campaign would be dense enough in time to capture short‐range variation at each site, long enough in time to examine trends at each site and across all sites, and dense enough in space to allow modelling of the relationship between the means at each of the sites. This paper outlines a methodology for semiparametric spatiotemporal modelling of data that is dense in time but sparse in space, obtained from a split panel design, the most feasible approach to covering space and time with limited equipment. The data are hourly averaged particle number concentration (PNC) and were collected as part of the International Laboratory for Air Quality and Health's Ultrafine Particles from Traffic Emissions and Children's Health (UPTECH) project. The panel design comprises two weeks of continuous measurements taken at each of a number of government primary schools in the Brisbane Metropolitan Area, with each school visited sequentially. The school data are augmented by data from long‐term monitoring stations at three locations in Brisbane, Australia. The temporal part of the model explains daily and weekly cycles in PNC at the schools. The temporal variation is modelled hierarchically with a penalised random walk term common to all sites and a similar term accounting for the remaining temporal trend at each site. The modelling of temporal trends requires an acknowledgement that the observations are correlated rather than independent. At each school and long‐term monitoring site, peaks in PNC can be attributed to the morning and afternoon rush hour traffic and new particle formation events. The spatial component of the model describes the school‐to‐school variation in mean PNC at each school and within each school ground. The spatial term in the model is derived from a stochastic partial differential equation and approximates a Gaussian process with a Gaussian Markov Random field. Fitting the model helps describe spatial and temporal variability at a subset of the UPTECH schools and the long‐term monitoring sites, which can be used to estimate the exposure of school children to ultrafine particles. Parameter estimates and their uncertainty are computed in a computationally efficient approximate Bayesian inference environment, R‐INLA.
Suggested Citation
Sam Clifford & Samantha Low‐Choy & Mandana Mazaheri & Farhad Salimi & Lidia Morawska & Kerrie Mengersen, 2019.
"A Bayesian spatiotemporal model of panel design data: Airborne particle number concentration in Brisbane, Australia,"
Environmetrics, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., vol. 30(7), November.
Handle:
RePEc:wly:envmet:v:30:y:2019:i:7:n:e2597
DOI: 10.1002/env.2597
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Cited by:
- Jaewoo Park & Sangwan Lee, 2022.
"A projection‐based Laplace approximation for spatial latent variable models,"
Environmetrics, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., vol. 33(1), February.
- Yating Wan & Minya Xu & Hui Huang & Song Xi Chen, 2021.
"A spatio‐temporal model for the analysis and prediction of fine particulate matter concentration in Beijing,"
Environmetrics, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., vol. 32(1), February.
- Duncan Lee & Chris Robertson & Colin Ramsay & Kate Pyper, 2020.
"Quantifying the impact of the modifiable areal unit problem when estimating the health effects of air pollution,"
Environmetrics, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., vol. 31(8), December.
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