Pires, BianicaKorkmaz, GizemEnsor, KatherineHigdon, DavidKeller, Sallie A.Lewis, Bryan L.Schroeder, Aaron2017-10-172017-10-172015http://hdl.handle.net/10919/79676In this paper we couple a spatiotemporal air quality model of ozone concentration levels with the synthetic information model of the Houston Metropolitan Area. While traditional approaches often aggregate the population, activities, or concentration levels of the pollutant across space and/or time, we utilize high performance computing and statistical learning tools to maintain the granularity of the data, allowing us to attach specific exposure levels to the synthetic individuals based on the exact time of day and geolocation of the activity. We demonstrate that maintaining the granularity of the data is critical to more accurately reflect the heterogeneous exposure levels of the population across time within the greater Houston area. We nd that individuals in the same zip code, neighborhood, block, and even household have varying levels of exposure depending on their activity patterns throughout the day.en-USIn CopyrightSynthetic populationsAir qualityOzonePersonal exposureTowards an in silico Experimental Platform for Air Quality: Houston, TX as a Case StudyConference proceeding