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Stéphane Perron

Researcher at Université de Montréal

Publications -  26
Citations -  700

Stéphane Perron is an academic researcher from Université de Montréal. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Environmental exposure. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 24 publications receiving 579 citations. Previous affiliations of Stéphane Perron include Université de Sherbrooke.

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Cardiovascular health, traffic-related air pollution and noise: are associations mutually confounded? A systematic review

TL;DR: Results from this review suggest that confounding of cardiovascular effects by noise or air pollutants is low, though with further improvements in exposure assessment, the situation may change.
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Mental health effects from urban bed bug infestation (Cimex lectularius L.): a cross-sectional study

TL;DR: The results suggest that individuals exposed to bed bug infestations are at risk of experiencing sleep disturbance and of developing symptoms of anxiety and possibly depression.
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Statistical modeling of the spatial variability of environmental noise levels in Montreal, Canada, using noise measurements and land use characteristics.

TL;DR: Land use regression models for LAeq24h, Lnight, and Lden to assess the long-term spatial variability of environmental noise levels in Montreal, Canada, considering various transportation noise sources (road, rail, and air).
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Cardiovascular effects of sub-daily levels of ambient fine particles: a systematic review

TL;DR: A theoretical model-driven systematic non-meta-analytical literature review was performed to document the association between PM sub-daily exposures and arrhythmia, ischemia and myocardial infarction as well as the likely mechanisms by which sub- daily PM exposures might induce these acute cardiovascular effects.
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Socioeconomic status and environmental noise exposure in Montreal, Canada

TL;DR: Noise exposure represents an environmental injustice in Montreal, which is an issue that merits both investigation and concern, and local conducted studies are imperative to assessing whether this double burden of noise exposure and low socioeconomic status exists in other contexts.