2000
DOI: 10.1038/sj.jea.7500114
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The National Exposure Research Laboratory's Consolidated Human Activity Database

Abstract: EPA's National Exposure Research Laboratory ( NERL ) has combined data from 12 U.S. studies related to human activities into one comprehensive data system that can be accessed via the Internet. The data system is called the Consolidated Human Activity Database ( CHAD ) and is available at http: / / www.epa.gov / nerl / . CHAD contains 22,968 person days of activity and is designed to assist exposure assessors and modelers in constructing populatioǹ`c ohorts'' of people with specified characteristics that are s… Show more

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Cited by 123 publications
(85 citation statements)
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“…Development of the sample of 57-60-year-old males for the comparative activity analyses. Studies used in the comparative analyses are all contained in CHAD; they are described in McCurdy et al (2000). More than 4 h with missing or blatantly incompatible location and activity codes (e.g., 4 h of child care in a garage; no sleep (all activities inside the home were coded as: ''general household activities,'' and similar problems).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Development of the sample of 57-60-year-old males for the comparative activity analyses. Studies used in the comparative analyses are all contained in CHAD; they are described in McCurdy et al (2000). More than 4 h with missing or blatantly incompatible location and activity codes (e.g., 4 h of child care in a garage; no sleep (all activities inside the home were coded as: ''general household activities,'' and similar problems).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, recording human activity patterns is an expensive and fairly intrusive process, so such data rarely exceed 10 consecutive days per individual (Graham and McCurdy, 2004). EPA's Consolidated Human Activity Database (CHAD; McCurdy et al, 2000) contains just 1 diary day from most of the individuals surveyed. One important hurdle for exposure and risk assessors, then, is to construct suitable longitudinal activity sequences for simulated individuals from this crosssectional data.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Retrieval of matching time-activity diary records from Consolidated Human Activity Database of the USEPA (CHAD; McCurdy et al, 2000;Stallings et al, 2002) for each virtual individual of the sample population, based on each individual's demographic characteristics.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%