Understanding the interaction between human activities and physical health under extreme heat environment in Phoenix, Arizona
This github repo deposits the web-based interactive visualization videos to demontrate the research results from ActivityLog-HeatMappers Citizen Science Program by the ASU Knowledge Exchange for Resilience research team. We also include a few jupyter notebooks to demonstrate how we generate the figures in the manuscript.
Zhao, Q., Li, Z., Shah, D., Fischer, H., Solís, P., & Wentz, E. (2021). Understanding the interaction between human activities and physical health under extreme heat environment in Phoenix, Arizona. Health & Place, 102691. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthplace.2021.102691
The ASU Knowledge Exchange for Resilience is supported by the Virginia G. Piper Charitable Trust. Piper Trust supports organizations that enrich health, well-being, and opportunity for the people of Maricopa County, Arizona. The conclusions, views and opinions expressed in this manuscript are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the Virginia G. Piper Charitable Trust. Dr. Qunshan Zhao has received UK ESRC’s on-going support for the Urban Big Data Centre (UBDC) [ES/L011921/1 and ES/S007105/1].
The authors would like to thank the Salvation Army Metro Phoenix, AZCEND, The Nature Conservancy, and American Express for help recruiting citizen science volunteers and organizing the events. We want to thank Mr. Ryan Reynolds, Mr. Sam Golla, and Mr. Maximus Caron for their data cleaning efforts on the paper activity logs, and Dr. Wei Luo’s help on activity log data visualization. We also want to thank all of the citizen scientists for providing us with relevant data and contributing to the intellectual development of this work from their lived experiences. Finally, all the insightful comments and suggestions on earlier versions of this manuscript from anonymous reviewers are greatly appreciated.