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Yuyoung Choi

Researcher at Korea University

Publications -  27
Citations -  377

Yuyoung Choi is an academic researcher from Korea University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Environmental science. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 20 publications receiving 190 citations. Previous affiliations of Yuyoung Choi include University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science.

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Understanding global PM2.5 concentrations and their drivers in recent decades (1998-2016)

TL;DR: Global risk regions of PM2.5 concentrations during 1998-2016 were spatiotemporally derived and a "decoupling" phenomenon occurred in developed countries, where urban expansion continued while PM2 .5 concentrations decreased, whereas developing countries increased PM 2.5 with decreasing greenness significantly in High Risk regions.
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Degrading ability of oligocyclic aromates by Phanerochaete sordida selected via screening of white rot fungi.

TL;DR: The ability of white rot fungi to degrade 3- or 4-ring PAHs (anthracene, phenanthrene, fluoranthene, pyrene) was determined and manganese peroxidase, the only extracellular ligninolytic enzyme detected during the cultivation, was evaluated.
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Understanding global spatio-temporal trends and the relationship between vegetation greenness and climate factors by land cover during 1982–2014

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used Normalized Difference Vegetation Index-3rd generation data from Advanced Very High-Resolution Radiometer - Global Inventory Modeling and Mapping Studies (AVHRR-GIMMS NDVI3g), land cover data from the Climate Change Initiative (CCI-LC), and climate data from CRU TS of climate variables (temperature and precipitation, solar radiation) over the past 33 years.
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Microfungi potentially disfiguring CCA-treated wood

TL;DR: Investigation of the fungal community inhabiting from the CCA-treated radiata pine board stored at the yard of a commercial treatment plant in Incheon, Korea found five microfungi species were the dominant species and could be candidate ‘tolerant and potential staining’ species that colonize, stain and/or degrade CCA.
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Assessing Climate Change Impact on Forest Habitat Suitability and Diversity in the Korean Peninsula

TL;DR: In this paper, the MaxEnt (Maximum Entropy) species distribution model, three key climate indices, and two representative climate change scenarios, using short and long-term data, were used to determine the impact of climate change on the Korean Peninsula.