2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2016.09.032
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Relationship between green space-related morphology and noise pollution

Abstract: Green spaces have been proved to have a positive effect on traffic noise pollution in the local scale; however their effects have not been explored on the urban level. This paper investigates the effects of green space-related parameters from a land cover viewpoint on traffic noise pollution in order to understand to what extent greener cities can also be quieter. A triple level analysis was conducted in the agglomeration, urban and kernel level including various case study cities across Europe. The green spac… Show more

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Cited by 114 publications
(69 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
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“…GWR is a local spatial statistical method for evaluating how the relationships between a dependent variable and one or more explanatory variables change spatially. As one of the useful tools to explore the spatial local heterogeneity, GWR has been widely used in many fields in recent years, For example, the geographic variation and impact factors of urban public green space availability [46], peri-urban agriculture [47], noise pollution [48], population [49] and resident recreation demand [50] have been investigated with GWR. The GWR method was usually compared with global spatial statistical methods, such as the ordinary least squares (OLS) regression, regression kriging, or co-kriging and the comparisons showed the advantages of GWR in improving mapping quality and exploring spatially varying local relationships [47][48][49][50][51].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…GWR is a local spatial statistical method for evaluating how the relationships between a dependent variable and one or more explanatory variables change spatially. As one of the useful tools to explore the spatial local heterogeneity, GWR has been widely used in many fields in recent years, For example, the geographic variation and impact factors of urban public green space availability [46], peri-urban agriculture [47], noise pollution [48], population [49] and resident recreation demand [50] have been investigated with GWR. The GWR method was usually compared with global spatial statistical methods, such as the ordinary least squares (OLS) regression, regression kriging, or co-kriging and the comparisons showed the advantages of GWR in improving mapping quality and exploring spatially varying local relationships [47][48][49][50][51].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Resultados similares revelaron el comportamiento cotidiano del decibelio para el LAeq (69,16 dB(A), atribuido al tráfico rodado en la propia ciudad de Puno (Marín, Marín & Argota, 2017). Otro estudio en 25 nú-cleos urbanos de ciudades europeas, la exposición a la banda de ruido fue más baja que 70 dB(A), cuyas exposiciones presentan un riesgo elevado (Margaritis & Kang, 2017).…”
Section: Resultados Y Discusiónunclassified
“…Approximately 20% of the European population is exposed to unacceptable noise levels (WHO 2011, EEA 2014a. Road traffic is the main cause of noise pollution in urban settings (Sørensen et al 2012, EEA 2014a, Brown 2015, Margaritis and Kang 2017 followed by rail and air traffic and industry (EEA 2014a). Beyond Europe the situation may be even worse since in those countries noise pollution is not always considered an environmental problem (Murphy and King 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%