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Edmund Seto

Researcher at University of Washington

Publications -  205
Citations -  7626

Edmund Seto is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Air quality index. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 190 publications receiving 6136 citations. Previous affiliations of Edmund Seto include University of California, Berkeley & Washington Department of Ecology.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Exposures to Air Pollution and Noise from Multi-Modal Commuting in a Chinese City

TL;DR: Personal exposure to air pollution and noise vary by season, neighborhood, and transportation modes, and exposure models accounting for environmental, meteorological, and behavioral factors, and duration of mixed mode commuting may be useful for health studies of urban traffic microenvironments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development and evaluation of a food environment survey in three urban environments of Kunming, China

TL;DR: Findings from an effort to develop and evaluate food environment survey instruments for use in a rapidly developing city in southwest China show that more developed inner city neighborhoods had a higher number of fast food restaurants and convenience stores than surrounding neighborhoods, indicating well-founded construct validity.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Opportunistic strategies for lightweight signal processing for body sensor networks

TL;DR: The smartphone platform not only provides the ability for wearable signal processing, but it allows for opportunistic sensing strategies, in which many of the onboard sensors and capabilities of modern smartphones may be collected and fused with body sensor data to provide environmental and social context.
Journal ArticleDOI

Real-Time Monitoring of Spray Drift from Three Different Orchard Sprayers.

TL;DR: Tower sprayers significantly reduced spray drift exposures in a neighboring orchard field when compared to the AFA sprayer, with the MFT sprayer producing the least drift; however these tower sprayers did do not fully eliminate drift.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spray Drift from a Conventional Axial Fan Airblast Sprayer in a Modern Orchard Work Environment.

TL;DR: The study findings demonstrate that buffers may offer drift exposure protection to orchard workers from airblast spraying and random effects showed large within-location variability, but relatively few systematic changes for individual locations across spray trials after accounting for wind speed, height, and distance.