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Found 9941 publications. Showing page 364 of 398:

Publication  
Year  
Category

An inter lab comparison of cyclic siloxanes in codfish collected from the Oslo Fjord. NILU PP

Durham, J.; Leknes, H.; Huff, D.; Gerhards, R.; Boehmer, T.; Schlabach, M.; Green, N.; Campbell, R.; Powell, D.

2009

An integrated tool for the screening of fate, persistence and long-range transport of organic chemicals

Sangion, Alessandro; Breivik, Knut; Toose, Liisa; Armitage, James M; Wania, Frank; Arnot, Jon A.

2023

An integrated multi-model approach for air quality assessment: Development and evaluation of the OSCAR air quality assessment system.

Sokhi, R.S.; Mao, H.; Srimath, S.T.G.; Fan, S.; Kitwiroon, N.; Luhana, L.; Kukkonen, J.; Haakana, M.; Karppinen, A.; van den Hout, K.D.; Boulter, P.; McCrae, I.S.; Larssen, S.; Gjerstad, K.I.; San José, R.; Bartzis, J.; Neofytou, P.; van den Breemer, P.; Neville, S.; Kousa, A.; Cortes, B.M.; Myrtveit, I.

2008

An integrated assessment model for fine particulate matter in Europe.

Amann, M.; Johansson, M.; Lükewille, A.; Schopp, W.; Apsimon, H.; Warren, R.; Gonzales, T.; Tarrasón, L.; Tsyro, S.

2001

An initial survey of the sources of contaminants to Lake Mjøsa. NILU OR

Breivik, K.; Schlabach, M.; Berg, T.

2005

An initial review of emission data for heavy metals and persistent organic pollutants. NILU F

Breivik, K.; Vestreng, V.; Rozovskaya, O.; Pacyna, J.M.

2005

An Infrastructural Analysis of a Crowdsourcing Tool for Environmental Research

Fossum, Selamawit Molla; Lopez-Aparicio, Susana; Røen, Håvard Vika

In this paper, we adopt information infrastructure design principles and concepts from the theory of critical mass to analyze and evaluate the socio-technical conditions that hindered the successful bootstrapping processes of a crowdsourcing tool for environmental research. The crowdsourcing tool was designed to improve the estimation of emissions from burning wood for residential heating in urban areas in Norway by collecting geolocation data on wood consumption and stove types. Our analysis identifies three groups of users, namely scientists, wood consumers (end users), and key stakeholders, that the IT capability of the tool needs to support. At this stage, we determined that the tool was more useful to the scientists than the other two groups, which was attributed to its low uptake. We uncovered various underlying issues through further analysis of means by which the tool becomes useful to key stakeholders. One particular issue concerned the tension between existing data collection practices, which are based on statistical methods, and the nature of crowdsourcing, which is based on the principle of open call with no sampling techniques. From our analysis, we concluded that developing crowdsourcing tools for research requires increasing the tool’s benefits for key stakeholders by addressing these underlying issues. Inferring from the theory of critical mass for collective action, we recommend that developers of crowdsourcing tools include a function that allows users to view the contributions of other users.

2018

An In Vitro Dosimetry Tool for the Numerical Transport Modeling of Engineered Nanomaterials Powered by the Enalos RiskGONE Cloud Platform

Cheimarios, Nikolaos; Pem, Barbara; Tsoumanis, Andreas; Ilic, Krunoslav; Vrček, Ivana Vinković; Melagraki, Georgia; Bitounis, Dimitrios; Isigonis, Panagiotis; Dusinska, Maria; Lynch, Iseult; Demokritou, Philip; Afantitis, Antreas

A freely available “in vitro dosimetry” web application is presented enabling users to predict the concentration of nanomaterials reaching the cell surface, and therefore available for attachment and internalization, from initial dispersion concentrations. The web application is based on the distorted grid (DG) model for the dispersion of engineered nanoparticles (NPs) in culture medium used for in vitro cellular experiments, in accordance with previously published protocols for cellular dosimetry determination. A series of in vitro experiments for six different NPs, with Ag and Au cores, are performed to demonstrate the convenience of the web application for calculation of exposure concentrations of NPs. Our results show that the exposure concentrations at the cell surface can be more than 30 times higher compared to the nominal or dispersed concentrations, depending on the NPs’ properties and their behavior in the cell culture medium. Therefore, the importance of calculating the exposure concentration at the bottom of the cell culture wells used for in vitro arrays, i.e., the particle concentration at the cell surface, is clearly presented, and the tool introduced here allows users easy access to such calculations. Widespread application of this web tool will increase the reliability of subsequent toxicity data, allowing improved correlation of the real exposure concentration with the observed toxicity, enabling the hazard potentials of different NPs to be compared on a more robust basis.

MDPI

2022

An in vitro 3D advanced lung model for hazard assessment of nanomaterials on human health

Camassa, Laura Maria Azzurra; Anmarkrud, Kristine Haugen; Sadeghiankaffash, Hamed; Elje, Elisabeth; Ervik, Torunn Kringlen; Congying, Z.; Shaposhnikov, S.; Rundén-Pran, Elise; Zienolddiny, Shanbeh

Elsevier

2023

An in vitro 3D advanced lung model for hazard assessment of nanomaterials on human health

Camassa, Laura Maria Azzurra; Anmarkrud, Kristine Haugen; Sadeghiankaffash, Hamed; Elje, Elisabeth; Ervik, Torunn Kringlen; Congying, Z.; Shaposhnikov, Sergey; Rundén-Pran, Elise; Zienolddiny-Narui, Shan

2024

An important contribution to springtime Arctic aerosol from biomass burning in Russia.

Warnecke, C.; Froyd, K.D.; Brioude, J.; Bahreini, R.; Brock, C.A.; Cozic, J.; De Gouw, J.A.; Fahey, D.W.; Ferrare, R.A.; Holloway, J.; Middlebrook, A.M.; Miller, L.; Montzka, S.A.; Schwarz, J.P.; Spackman, J.R.; Stohl, A.

2009

An important contribution to springtime Arctic aerosol from biomass burning in Russia.

Warneke, C.; Froyd, K.D.; Brioude, J.; Bahreini, R.; Brock, C.A.; Cozic, J.; de Gouw, J.A.; Fahey, D.W.; Ferrare, R.; Holloway, J.S.; Middlebrook, A.M.; Miller, L.; Montzka, S.; Schwarz, J.P.; Sodemann, H.; Spackman, J.R.; Stohl, A.

2010

An implementation of Citizen Observatory tools used in the CITI - SENSE project for air quality studies in Belgrade.

Jovaševic-Stojanovic, M.; Bartonova, A.; Topalovic, D.; Davidovic, M.; Schneider, P.

2016

An Image-processing based Approach for Precision Detection of Coarse Particle Deposition Rate

Shah, Syed Mohsin Ali; Casado-Mansilla, Diego; Hassani, Amirhossein; Fernandéz, Eduardo Illueca; de Ipiña Gonzalez De Artaza, Diego López

2024

An Icelandic dust storm observed from the air.

Blechschmidt, A.-M.,Kristjansson, J.E.; Hodnebrog, Ø.; Olafsson, H.; Burkhart, J.F.

2010

An expert assessment on climate change and health - with a European focus on lungs and allergies.

Forsberg, B.; Bråbäck, L.; Keune, H.; Kobernus, M.; von Krauss, M.K.; Yang, A.; Bartonova, A.

2012

An exceptional ozone episode in northern Fennoscandia.

Lindskog, A.; Karlsson, P.-E.; Grennfelt, P.; Solberg, S.; Forster, C.

2007

An exceptional ozone episode in northern Fenno-Scandinavia.

Lindskog, A.; Karlsson, P.E.; Grennfelt, P.; Solberg, S.; Forster, C.

2005

An example of field validation of a citizen-oriented cheap particle matter counter collocated with reference instruments.

Jovasevic-Stojanovic, M.; Topalovic, D.; Bartonova, A.; Pokric, B.; Zivkovic, M.; Lazovic, I.; Ristovski, Z.

2015

An evaluation tool kit of air quality micro-sensing units.

Fishbain, B.; Lerner, U.; Castell, N.; Cole-Hunter, T.; Popoola, O.; Broday, D.M.; Iñiguez, T.M.; Nieuwenhuijsen, M.; Jovasevic-Stojanovic, M.; Topalovic, D.; Jones, R.L.; Galea, K.S.; Etzion, Y.; Kizel, F.; Golumbic, Y.N.; Baram-Tsabari, A.; Yacobi, T.; Drahler, D.; Robinson, J.A.; Kocman, D.; Horvat, M.; Svecova, V.; Arpaci, A.; Bartonova, A.

2017

An Evaluation of the EnKF vs. EnOI and the Assimilation of SMAP, SMOS and ESA CCI Soil Moisture Data over the Contiguous US

Blyverket, Jostein; Hamer, Paul David; Bertino, Laurent; Albergel, Clément; Fairbairn, David; Lahoz, William A.

A number of studies have shown that assimilation of satellite derived soil moisture using the ensemble Kalman Filter (EnKF) can improve soil moisture estimates, particularly for the surface zone. However, the EnKF is computationally expensive since an ensemble of model integrations have to be propagated forward in time. Here, assimilating satellite soil moisture data from the Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) mission, we compare the EnKF with the computationally cheaper ensemble Optimal Interpolation (EnOI) method over the contiguous United States (CONUS). The background error–covariance in the EnOI is sampled in two ways: (i) by using the stochastic spread from an ensemble open-loop run, and (ii) sampling from the model spinup climatology. Our results indicate that the EnKF is only marginally superior to one version of the EnOI. Furthermore, the assimilation of SMAP data using the EnKF and EnOI is found to improve the surface zone correlation with in situ observations at a 95% significance level. The EnKF assimilation of SMAP data is also found to improve root-zone correlation with independent in situ data at the same significance level; however this improvement is dependent on which in situ network we are validating against. We evaluate how the quality of the atmospheric forcing affects the analysis results by prescribing the land surface data assimilation system with either observation corrected or model derived precipitation. Surface zone correlation skill increases for the analysis using both the corrected and model derived precipitation, but only the latter shows an improvement at the 95% significance level. The study also suggests that assimilation of satellite derived surface soil moisture using the EnOI can correct random errors in the atmospheric forcing and give an analysed surface soil moisture close to that of an open-loop run using observation derived precipitation. Importantly, this shows that estimates of soil moisture could be improved using a combination of assimilating SMAP using the computationally cheap EnOI while using model derived precipitation as forcing. Finally, we assimilate three different Level-2 satellite derived soil moisture products from the European Space Agency Climate Change Initiative (ESA CCI), SMAP and SMOS (Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity) using the EnOI, and then compare the relative performance of the three resulting analyses against in situ soil moisture observations. In this comparison, we find that all three analyses offer improvements over an open-loop run when comparing to in situ observations. The assimilation of SMAP data is found to perform marginally better than the assimilation of SMOS data, while assimilation of the ESA CCI data shows the smallest improvement of the three analysis products.

MDPI

2019

An evaluation of monitoring data for HMs and POPs with emphasis on model applicability. Powerpoint presentation. NILU F

Berg, T.; Breivik, K.; Aas, W.; Manø, S.; Schaug, J.; Uggerud, H.T.

2005

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