流动性大数据揭示了纽约布朗克斯超地方空气污染暴露差异

Iacopo Testi, An Wang, Sanjana Paul, Simone Mora, Erica Walker, Marguerite Nyhan, Fábio Duarte, Paolo Santi, Carlo Ratti
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摘要

空气污染对社会弱势群体的影响尤为严重。我们的研究弥补了在量化基于流动性的暴露及其相关差异问题方面的现有差距。我们将每天 500,000 多名匿名用户的流动性粒度与 100 × 100 米网格单元的超本地空气污染数据相结合,量化了纽约市一个种族多元化的密集城区的颗粒物暴露差异。我们的方法将对暴露及其差异的研究从个体化暴露跟踪推进到了具有人口代表性的规模。我们观察到个人暴露和暴露差异之间明显不同的空间模式,并注意到西班牙裔和低收入社区的居民暴露于细颗粒物(PM2.5)污染的程度最严重,比例最高。我们发现,种族和民族是比收入更能反映暴露差异的指标。我们的研究进一步表明,组内差异是造成暴露差异的主要原因,这表明除了一般的空气质量改善措施外,还需要针对来自社会弱势群体的高暴露人群制定更细致的缓解计划。这项研究利用纽约布朗克斯区的流动性数据和空气污染数据,观察社会弱势群体与空气污染暴露之间的联系。研究发现,与收入相比,种族和民族对空气污染暴露的影响更大,其中西班牙裔的风险最高。
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Big mobility data reveals hyperlocal air pollution exposure disparities in the Bronx, New York
Air pollution disproportionately affects socially disadvantaged populations. Our study bridges the existing gap in quantifying mobility-based exposure and its associated disparity issues. We combined the granular mobility of over 500,000 unique anonymized users daily and hyperlocal air pollution data in 100 × 100-m grid cells to quantify disparities in particulate matter exposure in a racially diverse and dense urban area of New York City. Our approach advances the study of exposure and its disparity from individualized exposure tracking to a population-representative scale. We observed apparently different spatial patterns between personal exposure and exposure disparities, noting that people from Hispanic-majority and low-income neighborhoods were those most severely and disproportionately exposed to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) pollution. We reveal that race and ethnicity are much stronger indicators of exposure disparity than income. Our study further demonstrates that within-group variation contributes a major portion to exposure disparities, suggesting more granular mitigation plans are needed to target high-exposure individuals from socially disadvantaged groups in addition to generic air quality improvement. This study used mobility data and air pollution data from the Bronx, NY, to observe the links between social disadvantage and air pollution exposure. It found that, more than income, race and ethnicity have a greater influence on air pollution exposure, with Hispanic people having the highest risk.
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