Youngseob Eum
University at Buffalo
13 Papers
3 Citations
Youngseob Eum is an academic researcher from University at Buffalo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 8 publications. Previous affiliations of Youngseob Eum include State University of New York System.
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Papers
Exposure to urban green space may both promote and harm mental health in socially vulnerable neighborhoods: A neighborhood-scale analysis in New York City.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors conducted an ecological cross-sectional analysis to evaluate the effects of green space exposure on mental disorder related emergency room (ER) visits in New York City at the level of census tract.
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Socioeconomic determinants of pediatric asthma emergency department visits under regional economic development in western New York.
TL;DR: It is suggested that improving the socioeconomic status of communities contributes to a reduction in emergency department utilization for pediatric asthma, and more empirical studies are warranted for evaluating the comprehensive effects of regional economic development on public health.
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The Impact of Individual Mobility on Long-Term Exposure to Ambient PM2.5: Assessing Effect Modification by Travel Patterns and Spatial Variability of PM2.5.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated whether individuals' routine travel patterns moderate the impact of mobility on individual long-term exposure assessment, and they found that the effect of mobility was significant, but that this effect was modified by individuals' regular travel patterns and the error-prone representation of spatiotemporal variability of PM2.5.
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Quality of hybrid location data drawn from GPS‐enabled mobile phones: Does it matter?
TL;DR: An imputation strategy that utilizes local environment information, such as parcel boundaries, and recording time intervals is developed and results indicate that imputed data are superior to raw data in identifying individuals’ frequently visited places on a weekly basis.
20
Ambient air quality and spatio-temporal patterns of cardiovascular emergency department visits
TL;DR: The results indicate that NO$$_2$$2 was significantly associated with the elevated ED utilization for CVD among the elderly and demonstrated the use of community multiscale air quality model-derived spatially and temporally resolved multi-pollutant exposures to an epidemiological study.