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Andres Baeza
Researcher at Arizona State University
Publications - 27
Citations - 1074
Andres Baeza is an academic researcher from Arizona State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Vulnerability. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 26 publications receiving 830 citations. Previous affiliations of Andres Baeza include University of Chile & University of Maryland, College Park.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Sustainable water management under future uncertainty with eco-engineering decision scaling
N. LeRoy Poff,Casey Brown,Theodore E. Grantham,John H. Matthews,Margaret A. Palmer,C. M. Spence,Robert L. Wilby,Marjolijn Haasnoot,Guillermo Mendoza,Kathleen Dominique,Andres Baeza +10 more
TL;DR: A new decision framework, eco-engineering decision scaling (EEDS), is introduced that explicitly and quantitatively explores trade-offs in stake - holder-defined engineering and ecological performance metrics across a range of possible management actions under unknown future hydrological and climate states.
Journal ArticleDOI
A framework for mapping and comparing behavioural theories in models of social-ecological systems
Maja Schlüter,Andres Baeza,Gunnar Dressler,Karin Frank,Jürgen Groeneveld,Jürgen Groeneveld,Wander Jager,Marco A. Janssen,Ryan R. J. McAllister,Birgit Müller,Kirill Orach,Nina Schwarz,Nanda Wijermans +12 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a framework, MoHuB (Modelling Human Behavior), to facilitate a broader inclusion of theories on human decision-making in formal natural resource management models.
Journal ArticleDOI
Development, environmental degradation, and disease spread in the Brazilian Amazon.
Marcia C. Castro,Andres Baeza,Cláudia Torres Codeço,Zulma M. Cucunubá,Ana Paula Dal’Asta,Giulio A. De Leo,Andrew P. Dobson,Gabriel Carrasco-Escobar,Raquel Martins Lana,Rachel Lowe,Antônio Miguel Vieira Monteiro,Mercedes Pascual,Mauricio Santos-Vega +12 more
TL;DR: This work discusses the impact of Amazon development models on human health, with a focus on vector-borne disease risk, and outlines policy actions that could mitigate these negative impacts while creating opportunities for environmentally sensitive economic activities.
Journal ArticleDOI
Climate forcing and desert malaria: The effect of irrigation
Andres Baeza,Menno J. Bouma,Andrew P. Dobson,Ramesh C. Dhiman,H. C. Srivastava,Mercedes Pascual,Mercedes Pascual +6 more
TL;DR: Results show that irrigation dampens the influence of climate forcing on the magnitude and frequency of malaria epidemics and, therefore, reduces their predictability, implying that irrigation can lead to more endemic conditions for malaria.
Climate forcing and desert malaria: the effect of
Andres Baeza,Menno J. Bouma,Andrew P. Dobson,Ramesh C. Dhiman,H. C. Srivastava,Mercedes Pascual +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used remote sensing data for the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) as an integrated measure of rainfall to examine correlation maps within the districts and at regional scales.