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Environmental Sciences

D-Index
35
Citations
5993
World Ranking
9261
National Ranking
3323

Overview

Gayle S.W. Hagler is affiliated with the Environmental Protection Agency in the United States. Their research focuses primarily on environmental science, with interdisciplinary contributions to engineering and earth and planetary sciences. They have published extensively within subfields including health, toxicology and mutagenesis; safety, risk, reliability and quality; environmental engineering; atmospheric science; and automotive engineering.

Their work mainly addresses topics such as air quality monitoring and forecasting, air quality and health impacts, atmospheric chemistry and aerosols, fire dynamics and safety research, fire detection and safety systems, vehicle emissions and performance, and climate change and health impacts.

Frequent publication venues for their work include:

  • Frontiers in Public Health
  • Atmospheric Pollution Research
  • Atmospheric Environment
  • Aerosol and Air Quality Research
  • Environmental Science Atmospheres

Some recent papers authored or co-authored by Gayle S.W. Hagler are:

  • Evaluation of two collocated federal equivalent method PM2.5 instruments over a wide range of concentrations in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2022, Atmospheric Pollution Research
  • Three Years of High Time-resolution Air Pollution Monitoring in the Complex Multi-source Harbor of New York and New Jersey, 2020, Aerosol and Air Quality Research
  • Editorial: Understanding and Communicating Wildland Fire Smoke Risk, 2021, Frontiers in Public Health

Other notable works in related collaborations include papers published in 2020 and 2021 on air sensor performance targets and creating clean air spaces during wildland fire smoke episodes.

Frequent co-authors in their research include:

  • Beth Hassett-Sipple
  • Amara L. Holder
  • Tim Hanley
  • Karoline K. Barkjohn
  • Sarah Coefield

Gayle S.W. Hagler's contributions contribute to a broader understanding of air pollution, health risks, and environmental engineering challenges, bridging multiple scientific domains to address complex environmental issues.

Best Publications

  • The Changing Paradigm of Air Pollution Monitoring

    Emily G. Snyder;Timothy H. Watkins;Paul A. Solomon;Eben D. Thoma

  • Applications of low-cost sensing technologies for air quality monitoring and exposure assessment: How far have they gone?

    Lidia Morawska;Phong K. Thai;Xiaoting Liu;Akwasi Asumadu-Sakyi

  • Community Air Sensor Network (CAIRSENSE) project: Evaluation of low-cost sensor performance in a suburban environment in the southeastern United States

    Wan Jiao;Gayle Hagler;Ronald Williams;Robert Sharpe

  • Post-processing Method to Reduce Noise while Preserving High Time Resolution in Aethalometer Real-time Black Carbon Data

    Gayle S. W. Hagler;Ram Vedantham;Jay R. Turner

  • Source areas and chemical composition of fine particulate matter in the Pearl River Delta region of China

    G.S.W. Hagler;M.H. Bergin;L.G. Salmon;J.Z. Yu

  • Field investigation of roadside vegetative and structural barrier impact on near-road ultrafine particle concentrations under a variety of wind conditions

    Gayle S.W. Hagler;Ming Yeng Lin;Andrey Khlystov;Richard W. Baldauf;Richard W. Baldauf

  • Ultrafine particles near a major roadway in Raleigh, North Carolina: Downwind attenuation and correlation with traffic-related pollutants

    G.S.W. Hagler;R.W. Baldauf;R.W. Baldauf;E.D. Thoma;T.R. Long

  • Field assessment of the effects of roadside vegetation on near-road black carbon and particulate matter.

    Halley L. Brantley;Gayle S.W. Hagler;Parikshit J. Deshmukh;Richard W. Baldauf

  • Mobile air monitoring data-processing strategies and effects on spatial air pollution trends

    H. L. Brantley;G. S. W. Hagler;E. S. Kimbrough;R. W. Williams

  • High-Resolution Mobile Monitoring of Carbon Monoxide and Ultrafine Particle Concentrations in a Near-Road Environment

    Gayle S.W. Hagler;Eben D. Thoma;Richard W. Baldauf

  • Field Test of Several Low-Cost Particulate Matter Sensors in High and Low Concentration Urban Environments.

    Karoline K Johnson;Michael H Bergin;Armistead G Russell;Gayle S W Hagler

  • Model evaluation of roadside barrier impact on near-road air pollution

    Gayle S.W. Hagler;Wei Tang;Matthew J. Freeman;David K. Heist

  • Long-term evaluation of air sensor technology under ambient conditions in Denver, Colorado

    Stephen Feinberg;Stephen Feinberg;Ron Williams;Gayle S. W. Hagler;Joshua Rickard

  • Opportunities and challenges for filling the air quality data gap in low- and middle-income countries

    Robert W. Pinder;Jacqueline M. Klopp;Gary Kleiman;Gayle S.W. Hagler

  • Air quality variability near a highway in a complex urban environment

    Richard W. Baldauf;David Heist;Vlad Isakov;Steven Perry

  • Long-term continuous measurement of near-road air pollution in Las Vegas: seasonal variability in traffic emissions impact on local air quality

    Sue Kimbrough;Richard W. Baldauf;Gayle S. W. Hagler;Richard C. Shores

  • Particulate and water-soluble carbon measured in recent snow at Summit, Greenland

    Gayle S. W. Hagler;Michael H. Bergin;Eugene A. Smith;Jack E. Dibb

  • Examining spatiotemporal variability of urban particulate matter and application of high-time resolution data from a network of low-cost air pollution sensors

    Stephen Neil Feinberg;Ron Williams;Gayle Hagler;Judy Low

  • Air Quality Sensors and Data Adjustment Algorithms: When Is It No Longer a Measurement?

    Gayle S. W. Hagler;Ronald Williams;Vasileios Papapostolou;Andrea Polidori

  • Understanding social and behavioral drivers and impacts of air quality sensor use

    Bryan J. Hubbell;Amanda Kaufman;Louie Rivers;Kayla Schulte

  • Composition and sources of carbonaceous aerosols at three contrasting sites in Hong Kong

    Mei Zheng;Gayle S. W. Hagler;Lin Ke;Lin Ke;Michael H. Bergin

  • A summer time series of particulate carbon in the air and snow at Summit, Greenland

    Gayle S. W. Hagler;Michael H. Bergin;Eugene A. Smith;Jack E. Dibb

Frequent Co-Authors

Richard Baldauf
Richard Baldauf Environmental Protection Agency
Michael H. Bergin
Michael H. Bergin Duke University
Vlad Isakov
Vlad Isakov Environmental Protection Agency
Michael D. Hays
Michael D. Hays Environmental Protection Agency
James J. Schauer
James J. Schauer University of Wisconsin–Madison
Zhi Ning
Zhi Ning Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
Peter K.K. Louie
Peter K.K. Louie Hong Kong Environmental Protection Department
Andrey Khlystov
Andrey Khlystov Desert Research Institute
Jack E. Dibb
Jack E. Dibb University of New Hampshire
Brian K. Gullett
Brian K. Gullett Environmental Protection Agency

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