全部 标题 作者
关键词 摘要

OALib Journal期刊
ISSN: 2333-9721
费用:99美元

查看量下载量

相关文章

更多...
PLOS ONE  2012 

Ecological Footprint Model Using the Support Vector Machine Technique

DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0030396

Full-Text   Cite this paper   Add to My Lib

Abstract:

The per capita ecological footprint (EF) is one of the most widely recognized measures of environmental sustainability. It aims to quantify the Earth's biological resources required to support human activity. In this paper, we summarize relevant previous literature, and present five factors that influence per capita EF. These factors are: National gross domestic product (GDP), urbanization (independent of economic development), distribution of income (measured by the Gini coefficient), export dependence (measured by the percentage of exports to total GDP), and service intensity (measured by the percentage of service to total GDP). A new ecological footprint model based on a support vector machine (SVM), which is a machine-learning method based on the structural risk minimization principle from statistical learning theory was conducted to calculate the per capita EF of 24 nations using data from 123 nations. The calculation accuracy was measured by average absolute error and average relative error. They were 0.004883 and 0.351078% respectively. Our results demonstrate that the EF model based on SVM has good calculation performance.

References

[1]  Wackernagel M, Rees W (1996) Our Ecological Footprint Reducing Human Impact on the Earth. New Society Publishers.
[2]  Mostafa MM (2010) A Bayesian approach to analyzing the ecological footprint of 140 nations. Ecological Indicators 10: 808–817.
[3]  Wackernagel M, Silverstein J (2000) Big things first: focusing on the scale imperative with the ecological footprint. Ecological Economics 32: 391–394.
[4]  Binningsbo H, de Soya I, Gleditsch N (2007) Green giant or straw man? Environmental pressure and civil conflict. Population and Environment 28: 337–353.
[5]  Costanza R (2000) The dynamics of the ecological footprint concept. Ecological Economics 32: 341–345.
[6]  WRI(World Resources Institute) (2000) World Resources 2000–2001: People and Ecosystems: The Fraying Web of Life. New York.
[7]  Jorgenson AK (2006) Global warming and the neglected greenhouse gas: a cross-national study of the social causes of methane emissions intensity, 1995. Social Forces 84: 1777–1796.
[8]  McDonald GW, Patterson MG (2004) Ecological footprints and interdependencies of New Zealand regions. Ecological Economics 50: 49–67.
[9]  Rice J (2007) Ecological unequal exchange: international trade and uneven utilization of environmental space in the world system. Social Forces 85: 1369–1392.
[10]  Barrett J, Scott A (2003) “The application of the ecological footprint”: a case of passenger transport in Merseyside. Local Environment 8: 167–183.
[11]  Li XM, Xiao RB, Yuan SH, Chen JA, Zhou JX (2010) Urban total ecological footprint forecasting by using radial basis function neural network: A case study of Wuhan city, China. Ecological Indicators 10: 241–248.
[12]  Crompton S, Roy R, Caird S (2002) Household ecological footprinting for active distance learning and challenge of personal lifestyles. International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education 3: 313–323.
[13]  Jorgenson A (2003) Consumption and environmental degradation: a cross-national analysis of the ecological footprint. Social Problems 50: 374–394.
[14]  Jorgenson A (2004) Uneven processes and environmental degradation in the world economy. Human Ecology Review 11: 103–113.
[15]  Jorgenson A (2005) Unpacking international power and the ecological footprints of nations: a quantitative cross-national study. Sociological Perspectives 48: 383–402.
[16]  Jorgenson A, Burns T (2007) The political–economic causes of change in the ecological footprints of nations, 1991–2001: a quantitative investigation. Social Science Research 36: 834–853.
[17]  Liu LX, Zhuang YQ, Liu XY (2011) Tax forecasting theory and model based on SVM optimized by PSO. Expert Systems with Applications 38: 116–120.
[18]  White TJ (2007) Sharing resources: The global distribution of the Ecological Footprint. Ecological Economics 64: 402–410.
[19]  WWF International (2006) Living Planet Report, Avenue du Mont-Blanc CH-1196 Gland, Switzerland.
[20]  World Bank (2002) World Development Indicators. Washington, DC.
[21]  Mcmanus Phil, Haughton Graham (2006) Planning with Ecological Footprints: a sympathetic critique of theory and practice 18: 113–127.
[22]  Dietz Simon, Neumayer Eric (2007) Weak and strong sustainability in the SEEA: Concepts and measurement 61: 617–626.

Full-Text

Contact Us

service@oalib.com

QQ:3279437679

WhatsApp +8615387084133