Comparison of land-use regression models between Great Britain and the Netherlands

D. Vienneau, K. de Hoogh, R. Beelen, P. Fischer, G. Hoek, D. Briggs

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Land-use regression models have increasingly been applied for air pollution mapping at typically the city level. Though models generally predict spatial variability well, the structure of models differs widely between studies. The observed differences in the models may be due to artefacts of data and methodology or underlying differences in source or dispersion characteristics. If the former, more standardised methods using common data sets could be beneficial. We compared land-use regression models for NO2 and PM10, developed with a consistent protocol in Great Britain (GB) and the Netherlands (NL). Models were constructed on the basis of 2001 annual mean concentrations from the national air quality networks. Predictor variables used for modelling related to traffic, population, land use and topography. Four sets of models were developed for each country. First, predictor variables derived from data sets common to both countries were used in a pooled analysis, including an indicator for country and interaction terms between country and the identified predictor variables. Second, the common data sets were used to develop individual baseline models for each country. Third, the country-specific baseline models were applied after calibration in the other country to explore transferability. The fourth model was developed using the best possible predictor variables for each country. A common model for GB and NL explained NO2 concentrations well (adjusted R2 0.64), with no significant differences in intercept and slopes between the two countries. The country-specific model developed on common variables for NL but not GB improved the prediction. The performance of models based upon common data was only slightly worse than models optimised with local data. Models transferred to the other country performed substantially worse than the country-specific models. In conclusion, care is needed both in transferring models across different study areas, and in developing large inter-regional LUR models
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)688-696
Number of pages9
JournalAtmospheric Environment
Volume44
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2010
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Air Pollution Air pollution mapping Air Quality Air quality network analysis Calibration datum exposure modelling Geographic information systems (GIS) Land use regression Land use regression models Land-use regression methods models Netherlands NO2 PM10 pollution Population Regression Traffic

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