Confounding associations between green space and outdoor artificial light at night: Systematic investigations and implications for urban health

Excessive urbanization leads to considerable nature deficiency and abundant artificial infrastructure in urban areas, which triggered intensive discussions on people's exposure to green space and outdoor artificial light at night (ALAN). Recent academic progress highlights that people's ex...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science and ecotechnology 2024-09, Vol.21, p.100436, Article 100436
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Yang, Kwan, Mei-Po, Wang, Jianying, Cai, Jiannan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Excessive urbanization leads to considerable nature deficiency and abundant artificial infrastructure in urban areas, which triggered intensive discussions on people's exposure to green space and outdoor artificial light at night (ALAN). Recent academic progress highlights that people's exposure to green space and outdoor ALAN may be confounders of each other but lacks systematic investigations. This study investigates the associations between people's exposure to green space and outdoor ALAN by adopting the three most used research paradigms: population-level residence-based, individual-level residence-based, and individual-level mobility-oriented paradigms. We employed the green space and outdoor ALAN data of 291 Tertiary Planning Units in Hong Kong for population-level analysis. We also used data from 940 participants in six representative communities for individual-level analyses. Hong Kong green space and outdoor ALAN were derived from high-resolution remote sensing data. The total exposures were derived using the spatiotemporally weighted approaches. Our results confirm that the negative associations between people's exposure to green space and outdoor ALAN are universal across different research paradigms, spatially non-stationary, and consistent among different socio-demographic groups. We also observed that mobility-oriented measures may lead to stronger negative associations than residence-based measures by mitigating the contextual errors of residence-based measures. Our results highlight the potential confounding associations between people's exposure to green space and outdoor ALAN, and we strongly recommend relevant studies to consider both of them in modeling people's health outcomes, especially for those health outcomes impacted by the co-exposure to them. [Display omitted] •Co-exposure to green spaces and outdoor artificial light at night (ALAN) exhibits confounding associations.•These confounding associations are universal across different research paradigms.•These confounding associations are spatially non-stationary.•Mobility-oriented measures of exposure may lead to stronger confounding associations.•Socio-demographic factors do not affect the confounding associations.
ISSN:2666-4984
2096-9643
2666-4984
DOI:10.1016/j.ese.2024.100436