this post was submitted on 28 Mar 2024
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Public Health

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 7 months ago (1 children)

The pictures sure make it look like bullshit.

Here's a depressed, post-industrial area where heart disease is more common.

Here's a suburb full of McMansions where heart disease is less common.

Gutter downspouts, masonry, bars on windows, and cracked pavement are positively correlated with heart disease and tree-lined sidewalks, big lawns and wraparound porches are negatively correlated with heart disease... go figure.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 7 months ago (1 children)

Welcome to the scientific process man: you’ve managed to deduce an obvious correlation. People also understood that living in fetid conditions led to disease for centuries before figuring out how they’re actually related (with several deeply incorrect theories along the way).

This is a way to measure that correlation and use that data for future analysis. The researchers doing this work are investigating things at a much more finite level than “duh-doy being poor is bad!!”

[–] [email protected] 2 points 7 months ago (2 children)

I mean, fair enough, but there's an actual connection between stinking pools of human waste and disease that was not understood due to a lack of adequate scientific equipment at the time.

In this case, we already know that poor communities have higher rates of pollution due to prior and ongoing industrial activity and traffic, and we can link specific pollutants to specific diseases. We know these places have poorer access to nutrition and higher rates of obesity related to the consumption of prepared and preserved foods. We know there are higher rates of substance abuse.

The environmental justice movement has existed for 40 years. We know what the problems are. We've had the data and technology to identify problem areas for decades.

I appreciate a novel approach, but I can't help thinking about the energy demands of using AI to analyze Street View imagery, and where that energy comes from (still probably a fossil fuel power plant), and what kind of neighborhood that power plant might be located near.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 7 months ago (1 children)

“Well, fair enough, but we already know the miasma caused by fetid odors is what causes illness, not to mention the spontaneous generation causing all sorts of parasites to rise from the dust” -some guy in 1256

I’m not trying to be mean to you, but this type of subject and analysis is just at a different kind of “level” of research than the very basic cause-> effect observational type of science. We can isolate out factors you’ve mentioned (such as air quality, diet, etc) and still look around at purely built environment factors and see how much it impacts health. “We’ve run the numbers and determined that having a sidewalk outside of your house lowers your lifetime health expenditures by $1230, and we can extrapolate that data to give to cities so they can make better decisions on how they plan housing areas” is a pretty huge ability to have. And that’s an “obvious” kind of result! Maybe they find a correlation between having a biodeverse lawn and longevity/health! We simply do not know, and this tech lets us get a bit closer.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 7 months ago (1 children)

Using AI to conjure correlations out of data seems more like speculating about miasma and dust parasites to me. I suppose if we can drill down from the wealth of correlations we generate to find something actually useful, that's potential, but good lord the examples in the article are not inspiring. I think if anything, the potential here is identifying problem areas and targeting solutions at them, something that actual people have to do currently, rather than establishing any link between built environment and heart disease that we don't already understand, because, you know, it's not 1256 anymore.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 7 months ago (1 children)

I just don’t really think that this is your field

[–] [email protected] 1 points 7 months ago

It's precisely because this is my field (public built environments) that I'm so skeptical of claims based on dubious statistical relationships. I'm willing to be convinced, of course, but if you had to go into a meeting with public officials and make suggestions, these are the sorts of questions you should be expecting. I am not convinced by the public health angle, so far, anyway.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 7 months ago

“Well, fair enough, but we already know the miasma caused by fetid odors is what causes illness, not to mention the spontaneous generation causing all sorts of parasites to rise from the dust” -some guy in 1256

I’m not trying to be mean to you, but this type of subject and analysis is just at a different kind of “level” of research than the very basic cause-> effect observational type of science. We can isolate out factors you’ve mentioned (such as air quality, diet, etc) and still look around at purely built environment factors and see how much it impacts health. “We’ve run the numbers and determined that having a sidewalk outside of your house lowers your lifetime health expenditures by $1230, and we can extrapolate that data to give to cities so they can make better decisions on how they plan housing areas” is a pretty huge ability to have. And that’s an “obvious” kind of result! Maybe they find a correlation between having a biodeverse lawn and longevity/health! We simply do not know, and this tech lets us get a bit closer.