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  • Hourly land-use regression ...
    Ndiaye, Aisha; Shen, Youchen; Kyriakou, Kalliopi; Karssenberg, Derek; Schmitz, Oliver; Flückiger, Benjamin; Hoogh, Kees de; Hoek, Gerard

    Environmental research, 09/2024, Letnik: 256
    Journal Article

    Annual average land-use regression (LUR) models have been widely used to assess spatial patterns of air pollution exposures. However, they fail to capture diurnal variability in air pollution and consequently might result in biased dynamic exposure assessments. In this study we aimed to model average hourly concentrations for two major pollutants, NO2 and PM2.5, for the Netherlands using the LUR algorithm. We modelled the spatial variation of average hourly concentrations for the years 2016–2019 combined, for two seasons, and for two weekday types. Two modelling approaches were used, supervised linear regression (SLR) and random forest (RF). The potential predictors included population, road, land use, satellite retrievals, and chemical transport model pollution estimates variables with different buffer sizes. We also temporally adjusted hourly concentrations from a 2019 annual model using the hourly monitoring data, to compare its performance with the hourly modelling approach. The results showed that hourly NO2 models performed overall well (5-fold cross validation R2 = 0.50–0.78), while the PM2.5 performed moderately (5-fold cross validation R2 = 0.24–0.62). Both for NO2 and PM2.5 the warm season models performed worse than the cold season ones, and the weekends' worse than weekdays’. The performance of the RF and SLR models was similar for both pollutants. For both SLR and RF, variables with larger buffer sizes representing variation in background concentrations, were selected more often in the weekend models compared to the weekdays, and in the warm season compared to the cold one. Temporal adjustment of annual average models performed overall worse than both modelling approaches (NO2 hourly R2 = 0.35–0.70; PM2.5 hourly R2 = 0.01–0.15). The difference in model performance and selection of variables across hours, seasons, and weekday types documents the benefit to develop independent hourly models when matching it to hourly time activity data. •Hourly LUR models for NO2 and PM2.5 are developed with SLR and RF.•Models' performance and structure differ between hours, seasons and weekday type.•Hourly LUR models outperformed temporal adjustment of annual surfaces.