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Mills, S.A.* ; Bousiotis, D.* ; Maya-Manzano, J.M. ; Tummon, F.* ; MacKenzie, A.R.* ; Pope, F.D.*

Constructing a pollen proxy from low-cost Optical Particle Counter (OPC) data processed with Neural Networks and Random Forests.

Sci. Total Environ. 871:161969 (2023)
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Pollen allergies affect a significant proportion of the global population, and this is expected to worsen in years to come. There is demand for the development of automated pollen monitoring systems. Low-cost Optical Particle Counters (OPCs) measure particulate matter and have attractive advantages of real-time high time resolution data and affordable costs. This study asks whether low-cost OPC sensors can be used for meaningful monitoring of airborne pollen. We employ a variety of methods, including supervised machine learning techniques, to construct pollen proxies from hourly-average OPC data and evaluate their performance, holding out 40 % of observations to test the proxies. The most successful methods are supervised machine learning Neural Network (NN) and Random Forest (RF) methods, trained from pollen concentrations collected from a Hirst-type sampler. These perform significantly better than using a simple particle size-filtered proxy or a Positive Matrix Factorisation (PMF) source apportionment pollen proxy. Twelve NN and RF models were developed to construct a pollen proxy, each varying by model type, input features and target variable. The results show that such models can construct useful information on pollen from OPC data. The best metrics achieved (Spearman correlation coefficient = 0.85, coefficient of determination = 0.67) were for the NN model constructing a Poaceae (grass) pollen proxy, based on particle size information, temperature, and relative humidity. Ability to distinguish high pollen events was evaluated using F1 Scores, a score reflecting the fraction of true positives with respect to false positives and false negatives, with promising results (F1 ≤ 0.83). Model-constructed proxies demonstrated the ability to follow monthly and diurnal trends in pollen. We discuss the suitability of OPCs for monitoring pollen and offer advice for future progress. We demonstrate an attractive alternative for automated pollen monitoring that could provide valuable and timely information to the benefit of pollen allergy sufferers.
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Publication type Article: Journal article
Document type Scientific Article
Keywords Aerobiology ; Automatic Monitoring ; Low-cost Sensors ; Machine Learning ; Optical Particle Counter (opc) ; Pollen; Positive Matrix Factorization; Ice Nucleating Ability; Subpollen Particles; Source Apportionment; Birch Pollen; Release; Temperature; Performance; Immersion; Transport
Language english
Publication Year 2023
HGF-reported in Year 2023
ISSN (print) / ISBN 0048-9697
e-ISSN 1879-1026
Quellenangaben Volume: 871, Issue: , Pages: , Article Number: 161969 Supplement: ,
Publisher Elsevier
Publishing Place Radarweg 29, 1043 Nx Amsterdam, Netherlands
Reviewing status Peer reviewed
POF-Topic(s) 30202 - Environmental Health
Research field(s) Allergy
PSP Element(s) G-505400-001
Grants COST Action
EUMETNET AutoPollen Programme
Bayerisches Landesamt fuer Gesundheit undLebensmittelsicherheit (LGL)
grant "Quantification of Utility of Atmospheric Network Technologies (QUANT)"
Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) through its Central England NERC Training Alliance (CENTA) doctoral research training consortium, at the University of Birmingham
Scopus ID 85147842794
PubMed ID 36754323
Erfassungsdatum 2023-02-19