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Silicosis : geographic changes in research ; an analysis employing density-equalizing mapping
(2014)
Background: A critical evaluation of scientific efforts is needed in times of modified evaluation criteria for academic personnel and institutions.
Methods: Using scientometric benchmark procedures and density-equalizing mapping, we analysed the global scientific efforts on "silicosis" of the last 92 years focusing on geographical changes within the last 30 years, specifying the most productive authors, institutions, countries and the most successful cooperations.
Results: The USA as the most productive supplier have established their position as center of international cooperation, followed in considerable distance by the United Kingdom, Germany and China. Asian countries, particularly China, catch up and are expected to excel the USA still in this decade.
Conclusion: The combination of scientometric procedures with density-equalizing mapping reveals a distinct global pattern of research productivity and citation activity. Modified h-index, citationrate and impact factor have to be discussed critically due to distortion by bias of self-citation, language and co-authorship.
Background: Chronic particulate matter (PM) exposure is correlated to various health effects, even at low amounts. WHO has defined PM concentration limits as daily and annual mean values which were made legally binding in the European Union. While many studies have focused on PM concentrations in special environments, little is known about the average PM- exposure for both employees and passengers in the German public transportation system.
Methods: Particulate matter (PM10, PM2.5, PM1) - concentrations were monitored for 30 minutes at 15 different areas in Frankfurt am Main with major public traffic. Maximum and mean concentrations and, as a surrogate for the inhaled dosage, the Area Under the Curve (AUC) for 15 minutes of exposure were calculated.
Results: The WHO limits for PM10 and PM2.5 were exceeded at nearly all times and areas. Highest maximum concentrations were found at underground stations, subterranean railway stations and subterranean shopping arcades with much lower values obtained at surface points. In one measurement at a surface test point smokers who neglected the non-smoking policy could be identified as a major cause for a at least temporary strong increase of PM-load as seen in high maximum values and normal averages.
Conclusions: Subterranean areas have high particulate matter contamination exceeding WHO limits. Improvement may be achieved by increased ventilation. Subterranean shops and kiosks, being workplaces with long term exposure, should be equipped with external air supply. The non- smoking policy of the "Deutsche Bahn" for public spaces should be enforced.
The exposure to tobacco smoke during pregnancy is considered to be amongst the most harmful avoidable risk factors. In this scientometric and gender study scientific data on smoking and pregnancy was analyzed using a variety of objective scientometric methods like the number of scientific contributions, the number of citations and the modified h-index in combination with gender-specific investigations. Covering a time period from 1900 to 2012, publishing activities of 27,955 authors, institutions and countries, reception within the international scientific community and its reactions were analyzed and interpreted. Out of 10,043 publications the highest number of scientific works were published in the USA (35.5%), followed by the UK (9.9%) and Canada (5.3%). These nations also achieve the highest modified h-indices of 128, 79 and 62 and the highest citation rates of 41.4%, 8.6% and 5.3%, respectively. Out of 12,596 scientists 6,935 are female (55.1%), however they account for no more than 49.7% of publications (12,470) and 42.8% of citations (172,733). The highest percentage of female experts about smoking and pregnancy is found in Australasia (60.7%), while the lowest is found in Asia (41.9%). The findings of the study indicate an increase in gender equality as well as in quantity and quality of international scientific research about smoking and pregnancy in the future.
Introduction: Curare is one of the best-examined neurotoxins of the world, which has empirically been used for centuries by American Indigenes. Research on curare has been performed much later, a global scientometric analysis on curare research or its derivates does not yet exist. This bibliometric analysis is part of the global NewQis-project and should illuminate both toxic and historic issues of research on curare.
Methods: The ISI Web of Science was searched for data covering 1900 to 2013 using a term which included as many original articles on curare as possible. 3,867 articles were found and analyzed for common bibliometric items such as the number of citations, language of the articles or the (modified) Hirsch-Index (h-index). Results are illustrated utilizing modern density equalizing map projections (DEMP) or beam diagrams.
Results: Most publications were located in North America and Europe. The USA has the highest number of publications as well as the highest h-index. The number of publications overall rose until the late 1990s and later decreased. Furthermore, sudden increases of research activity are ascribable to historic events, like the first use of curare as muscle relaxant during surgery.
Discussion: This scientometric analysis of curare research reflects several tendencies as previously seen in other bibliometric investigations, i.e. the scientific quality standard of North America and Europe. Research on curare decreased however, due to the declining attention towards this muscle relaxant. This work exemplifies also how scientometric methods can be used to illuminate historic circumstances immediately stimulating scientific research.
Hintergrund: Es ist unbekannt bzw. umstritten, ob die in Deutschland eingeführten Umweltzonen (UWZ) die Feinstaubbelastung nachweisbar reduzieren.
Methode: PM10-Konzentrationen von den Messstationen innerhalb und außerhalb der UWZ in 19 deutschen Städten wurden analysiert (Augsburg, Berlin, Dortmund, Duisburg, Düsseldorf, Essen, Frankfurt a. M., Hannover, Herrenberg, Ilsfeld, Karlsruhe, Köln, Ludwigsburg, Mannheim, München, Reutlingen, Stuttgart, Tübingen, Wuppertal), um die Wirksamkeit der Fahrverbote (Stufe 1) für Fahrzeuge der Schadstoffgruppe 1 (ohne Plakette) auf die Schadstoffkonzentration zu untersuchen. Kontinuierliche Halbstundenmesswerte und gravimetrische Tagesmittelwerte wurden für den Zeitraum von ca. 2005 bis Ende 2009 übernommen. Die Analyse beruht auf vier einander paarweise zugeordneten Messwerten als gematchte Quadrupel aus zwei Index- und zwei Referenzwerten (Indexstationen liegen innerhalb, Referenzstationen messen außerhalb der UWZ). Ein Indexwert und der simultan gemessene Referenzwert wurden während der aktiven Phase der UWZ gemessen, das andere Wertepaar wurde vor Einführung der UWZ erhoben. Die Wertepaare haben eine Zeitdifferenz von 364 Tagen oder von einem Vielfachen von 364 Tagen, wodurch die Jahreszeit, der Wochentag und die Tageszeit im Quadrupel konstant gehalten werden. Differenzen der Indexwerte wurden regressionstechnisch mit den Differenzen der Referenzwerte korrigiert, wobei meteorologische Parameter (Mischungsschichthöhe, Niederschlagsmenge, Windgeschwindigkeit), Schulferienzeiten, Phase der Umweltprämie, LKW-Fahrverbotszeiten und Ausgangswerte an den Index- und Referenzstationen als Kovariablen in sog. „fixed effects“ Regressionsanalysen der Quadrupel berücksichtigt wurden (Differenzwertmethode im Zwei-Perioden-Fall). Dieser statistische Ansatz wurde vor der eigentlichen Datenanalyse an simulierten Messdaten der FU Berlin erfolgreich erprobt.
Ergebnisse: 2 110 803 Quadrupel kontinuierlicher PM10-Messungen und 15 735 gravimetrische Quadrupel wurden aus den verfügbaren Daten der Messstationen identifiziert, aus denen 61 169 Quadrupel zu Tagesmittelwerten aufgebaut wurden. Die Analysen für die erste Stufe ergaben als beste Effektschätzer (an allen Indexstationen) eine Feinstaubreduktion von ≤ 0,2 μg/m3 (bzw. relative PM10-Reduktionen ≤ 1 %). Der beste Effektschätzer an allen Verkehrsstationen (also ohne städtische Hintergrund- und Industrieindexstationen) lag unterhalb von 1 μg/m3 (bzw. weniger als 5 %).
Schlussfolgerungen: Alle Analysewerte liegen damit unter den vor Einführung von UWZ prognostizierten Feinstaubreduktionen. Diese Studie untersuchte als erste übergreifend die Wirksamkeit von UWZ der Stufe 1 in Deutschland auf die Feinstaubkonzentrationen von PM10 nach einem einheitlichen Datensammlungs- und Analyseplan und unter Berücksichtigung möglichst vieler Störeinflüsse.
Background: Low Emission Zones (LEZs) are areas where the most polluting vehicles are restricted from entering. The effectiveness of LEZs to lower ambient exposures is under debate. This study focused on LEZs that restricted cars of Euro 1 standard without appropriate retrofitting systems from entering and estimated LEZ effects on NO2, NO, and NOx ( = NO2+NO).
Methods: Continuous half-hour and diffuse sampler 4-week average NO2, NO, and NOx concentrations measured inside and outside LEZs in 17 German cities of 6 federal states (2005–2009) were analysed as matched quadruplets (two pairs of simultaneously measured index values inside LEZ and reference values outside LEZ, one pair measured before and one after introducing LEZs with time differences that equal multiples of 364 days) by multiple linear and log-linear fixed-effects regression modelling (covariables: e.g., wind velocity, amount of precipitation, height of inversion base, school holidays, truck-free periods). Additionally, the continuous half-hour data was collapsed into 4-week averages and pooled with the diffuse sampler data to perform joint analysis.
Results: More than 3,000,000 quadruplets of continuous measurements (half-hour averages) were identified at 38 index and 45 reference stations. Pooling with diffuse sampler data from 15 index and 10 reference stations lead to more than 4,000 quadruplets for joint analyses of 4-week averages. Mean LEZ effects on NO2, NO, and NOx concentrations (reductions) were estimated to be at most −2 µg/m3 (or −4%). The 4-week averages of NO2 concentrations at index stations after LEZ introduction were 55 µg/m3 (median and mean values) or 82 µg/m3 (95th percentile).
Conclusions: This is the first study investigating comprehensively the effectiveness of LEZs to reduce NO2, NO, and NOx concentrations controlling for most relevant potential confounders. Our analyses indicate that there is a statistically significant, but rather small reduction of NO2, NO, and NOx concentrations associated with LEZs.