Litcius/Paper detail

A Traffic-Based Method to Predict and Map Urban Air Quality

Rasa Žalakevičiūtė, Marco G. Bastidas, Adrian Buenaño, Yves Rybarczyk

2020Applied Sciences42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

As global urbanization, industrialization, and motorization keep worsening air quality, a continuous rise in health problems is projected. Limited spatial resolution of the information on air quality inhibits full comprehension of urban population exposure. Therefore, we propose a method to predict urban air pollution from traffic by extracting data from Web-based applications (Google Traffic). We apply a machine learning approach by training a decision tree algorithm (C4.8) to predict the concentration of PM2.5 during the morning pollution peak from: (i) an interpolation (inverse distance weighting) of the value registered at the monitoring stations, (ii) traffic flow, and (iii) traffic flow + time of the day. The results show that the prediction from traffic outperforms the one provided by the monitoring network (average of 65.5% for the former vs. 57% for the latter). Adding the time of day increases the accuracy by an average of 6.5%. Considering the good accuracy on different days, the proposed method seems to be robust enough to create general models able to predict air pollution from traffic conditions. This affordable method, although beneficial for any city, is particularly relevant for low-income countries, because it offers an economically sustainable technique to address air quality issues faced by the developing world.

Topics & Concepts

Air quality indexWeightingAir pollutionInverse distance weightingComputer scienceTransport engineeringMultivariate interpolationEnvironmental scienceMeteorologyGeographyEngineeringMedicineOrganic chemistryRadiologyChemistryComputer visionBilinear interpolationAir Quality Monitoring and ForecastingAir Quality and Health ImpactsVehicle emissions and performance