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1 , and changes to environmental surroundings (built environment).
2 implementation and 25.8% proposed changes in built environment.
3 terventions aimed at tackling the obesogenic built environment.
4 se exposure patterns are associated with the built environment.
5 often a junction between the natural and the built environment.
6 patially correlated exposures related to the built environment.
7 generation, transport, agriculture, and the built environment.
8 and these concepts are translatable to other built environments.
9 tem (GIS) variables to characterize walkable built environments.
10 eling, and behaviors give rise to social and built environments.
12 ssociations between multiple measures of the built environment and biomarkers of early vascular aging
13 nship between the quality of the residential built environment and birth outcomes, which we argue are
14 s is important in environmental science, the built environment and cultural heritage preservation.
15 have relied upon subjective measures of the built environment and few have examined the relation bet
17 wn that associations between features of the built environment and health depend on the geographic sc
18 mon sources of data used for research on the built environment and health: listings of businesses fro
19 nterventions, though it is not clear how the built environment and occupant behaviours interact to mo
20 stics of the social environments such as the built environment and pollution, as well as by socioecon
22 which might be compensated by modifying the built environment and providing assistive devices, and f
23 ion between residential characteristics, the built environment and the behaviour of people regulate t
25 enewable content and energy footprint of the built environment and to develop "smart buildings" that
29 king with, including the use of devices, the built environment, and the demands and complexities of p
30 uminium, copper, iron, and zinc in the human-built environment are mapped globally at 1-km nominal re
31 informational environment, and altering the built environment are the least costly, most logisticall
32 teraction between occupant behaviors and the built environment are thought to affect indoor fungal co
33 a societal commitment to alter the food and built environments are all necessary components to battl
38 iman et al. present longitudinal analyses of built environment characteristics as predictors of neigh
40 01-2003), the authors examined the effect of built environment characteristics on mobility disability
45 ons include policies to improve the food and built environments, cross-cutting actions (such as leade
47 understanding of the factors that shape the built environment exposome and its influence on human we
48 approximately 90% of their time indoors, the built environment exposome merits particular attention.
49 r km(2)), adjusting for activity-influencing built environment factors and individual covariates.
50 ntial to identify environmental triggers and built environment factors associated with rescue inhaler
51 fy the impacts of environmental triggers and built environment factors on asthma short-acting broncho
53 lyses to identify environmental triggers and built environment factors that are associated with asthm
55 ter adjusting for other spatially correlated built environment factors, suggesting that alternative p
56 ween baseline levels of and a change in each built environment feature and a change in the frequency
57 udy contributes new evidence to suggest that built environment features around homes and workplaces m
58 rvational study examined the associations of built environment features around the home and workplace
60 reases in leisure walking, but no changes in built environment features were associated with leisure
61 The bacteria that colonize humans and our built environments have the potential to influence our h
62 senting important domains of the residential built environment: housing damage, property disorder, se
63 ight the role of activity inequality and the built environment in improving physical activity and hea
64 decades; however, the potential role of the built environment in mitigating these trends is unclear.
71 urther evidence that certain features of the built environment may be important in the design of neig
75 usted with the design and engineering of the built environment, may offer real breakthroughs for the
76 ere used to assess associations between each built environment measure and biomarkers of EVA, adjusti
79 ssign residential exposure to factors of the built environment: Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectrora
80 76 sites spanning the range of land uses and built environments of the city; each site was visited fr
83 ding to a negative energy balance, the dense built environment, pervasive food marketing, and the inc
86 ionship between seven indices of residential built environment quality and adverse reproductive outco
88 ndition compared to viewing scenes depicting built environments (RMSSD; 50.0 +/- 31.3 vs 34.8 +/- 14.
90 s four nonconventional land-cover types: the built environment, salt-affected land, contaminated land
92 important to identify characteristics of the built environment that are beneficial to human health.
93 s to identify modifiable risk factors in the built environment that have been shown to influence fung
94 y control the materials and chemistry of the built environment to positively influence the microbial
98 ural design on people's visual experience of built environments, we know little about its neural repr
100 often referred to in the literature as the 'built environment' which encompasses the entire range of
101 investigate the association of neighborhood built environment with trends in the amount of walking b
104 on system was used to derive measures of the built environment within a quarter-mile (0.4 km) and hal
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