2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.envsoft.2014.07.012
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Prediction of ultrafine particle number concentrations in urban environments by means of Gaussian process regression based on measurements of oxides of nitrogen

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Cited by 27 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Hegstad and Omre, 2001;Craig et al, 2001), atmospheric dispersion (e.g. Politis and Robertson, 2004;Konda et al, 2010;Reggente et al, 2014) and climatology (Rougier et al, 2009b;Qin et al, 2013;Castruccio et al, 2014;Plouffe et al, 2015). In contrast, statistical emulation is relatively unknown to the computational wind engineering (CWE) community.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Hegstad and Omre, 2001;Craig et al, 2001), atmospheric dispersion (e.g. Politis and Robertson, 2004;Konda et al, 2010;Reggente et al, 2014) and climatology (Rougier et al, 2009b;Qin et al, 2013;Castruccio et al, 2014;Plouffe et al, 2015). In contrast, statistical emulation is relatively unknown to the computational wind engineering (CWE) community.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Gaussian processes (GP) (Williams and Rasmussen (1996); Rasmussen (1997); Rasmussen and Williams (2005)) are nonparametric statistical models that compactly describe distributions over functions with continuous do-mains. They have found various applications in the environmental modeling community, where they are used as data-driven models capable to predict various quantities of interest with quantified uncertainties such as ultra fine particles (Reggente et al (2014)), mean temperatures over North Atlantic Ocean (Higdon (1998)), wind speed (Hu and Wang (2015)), and monthly streamflow (Sun et al (2014)), just to name a few. When the training data for GPs comes from simulators rather than field measurements, then GPs become computational efficient surrogate models or emulators of highfidelity models (Kennedy et al (2002); O'Hagan (2006); Conti and O'Hagan (2010)), with various applications in environmental modeling such as fire emissions (Katurji et al (2015)), ocean and climate circulation (Tokmakian et al (2012)), urban drainage (Machac et al (2016)), and computational fluid dynamics (Moonen and Allegrini (2015)).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To obtain better prediction performance, Clifford et al [22] proposed a generalized additive model using meteorological data, time, solar radiation and rainfall as explanatory variables. Reggente et al [23] employed a Gaussian process regression to estimate UFPs in an urban air pollution monitoring network based on local and remote concentrations of NO x , O 3 , CO, and UFPs. None of the mentioned works have considered mobile sensor networks.…”
Section: B Air Pollution Modelingmentioning
confidence: 99%