AI Article Synopsis

  • Athletes are exposed to high levels of air pollutants due to their intense breathing during events, but existing sports governing bodies lack proper guidelines for managing these risks.
  • The study deployed air quality sensors in six international stadia to monitor various pollutants and environmental conditions, revealing insights into the origins and patterns of pollution.
  • The collected data can help optimize scheduling for athletic events and training by identifying the best times to minimize athletes' exposure to harmful air quality.

Article Abstract

While athletes have high exposures to air pollutants due to their increased breathing rates, sport governing bodies have little guidance to support events scheduling or protect stadium users. A key limitation for this is the lack of hyper-local, high time-resolved air quality data representative of exposures in stadia. This work aimed to evaluate whether air quality sensors can describe ambient air quality in Athletics stadia. Sensing nodes were deployed in 6 stadia in major cities around the globe, monitoring NO, O, NO, PM, PM, PM, CO, ambient temperature, and relative humidity. Results demonstrated that the interpretation of hourly pollutant patterns, in combination with self-organising maps (SOMs), enabled the interpretation of probable emission sources (e.g., vehicular traffic) and of atmospheric processes (e.g., local vs. regional O formation). The ratios between PM size fractions provided insights into potential emission sources (e.g., local dust re-suspension) which may help design mitigation strategies. The high resolution of the data facilitated identifying optimal periods of the day and year for scheduling athletic trainings and/or competitions. Provided that the necessary data quality checks are applied, sensors can support stadium operators in providing athlete communities with recommendations to minimise exposure and provide guidance for event scheduling.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8950704PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19063561DOI Listing

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