Abstract

Environmental health studies on green space may be affected by contextual uncertainties originating from the temporality of environmental exposures and by how the spatial context is delimitated. The Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) is frequently used as an outdoor green space metric capturing the chlorophyll content in the vegetation canopy. This study assessed (1) whether residential NDVI exposures vary over time, and (2) how these time series of NDVI scores vary across spatial context delimitations. Multi-temporal NDVI data for the period 2006–2017 for the Netherlands were obtained from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) satellite platform. Annual NDVI exposures were determined across multiple buffer sizes (i.e., 300, 600, and 1000 m) centered on a random sample of 10,000 Dutch residential addresses. Besides the descriptive statistics, pairwise Wilcoxon tests and Fligner–Killeen tests were used to determine mean and variance differences in annual NDVI scores across buffer widths. Heat maps visualized the correlation matrices. Significance levels were adjusted for multiple hypotheses testing. The results indicated that annual NDVI metrics were significantly correlated but their magnitude varied notably between 0.60 to 0.97. Numerous mean and variance differences in annual NDVI exposures were significant. It seems that the disparate buffers (i.e., 300 and 1000 m) were less strongly correlated, possibly because variance heterogeneity is reduced in larger buffers. These results have been largely consistent over the years and have passed Monte Carlo-based sensitivity tests. In conclusion, besides assessing green space exposures along different buffer sizes, our findings suggest that green space–health studies should employ NDVI data that are well-aligned with epidemiological data. Even an annual temporal incompatibility may obscure or distort green space–health associations. Both strategies may diminish contextual uncertainties in environmental exposure assessments.

Highlights

  • It is increasingly recognized that the human body responds to the environments to which it is exposed [1,2,3]

  • This study shed light on the often ignored circumstance of temporally incompatible green space data by exploring annual time series of Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) exposures derived from buffers centered on a large sample of residential addresses randomly distributed across the Netherlands

  • This paper addressed contextual uncertainties originating from both the temporality of environmental exposures and how the spatial context is delimitated

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Summary

Introduction

It is increasingly recognized that the human body responds to the environments to which it is exposed [1,2,3]. The assessment of health-threatening and health-promoting environmental exposures has received fresh impetus from progress in earth observation coupled with geographic information systems (GIS) leading to high-quality environmental information [4,5]. Satellite images represent the gold standard for capturing conditions of the natural environment (i.e., vegetation) in an objective manner [5,6,7]. One prominent environmental factor is green space—namely forests, parks, etc.—which is capable of reducing harm caused by exposure to physical and mental health stressors [2,8]. Studies found that being surrounded by outdoor residential green space has beneficial effects for diverse population. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 852; doi:10.3390/ijerph16050852 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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