ScholarGate
Trợ lý

So sánh phương pháp

Xem các phương pháp đã chọn cạnh nhau; những hàng khác biệt được làm nổi bật.

Tapio Decoupling Analysis×STIRPAT Model×
Lĩnh vựcEnvironmental SociologyEnvironmental Sociology
HọProcess / pipelineRegression model
Năm ra đời20051997
Người khởi xướngPetri Tapio (building on OECD decoupling indicators)Thomas Dietz & Eugene A. Rosa; Richard York
LoạiElasticity-based classification of growth-versus-pressure trajectoriesLog-linear stochastic regression model of environmental impact drivers
Công trình gốcTapio, P. (2005). Towards a theory of decoupling: degrees of decoupling in the EU and the case of road traffic in Finland between 1970 and 2001. Transport Policy, 12(2), 137-151. DOI ↗Dietz, T., & Rosa, E. A. (1997). Effects of population and affluence on CO2 emissions. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 94(1), 175-179. DOI ↗
Tên gọi khácDecoupling Elasticity Analysis, Tapio Decoupling Index, OECD Decoupling Indicator, Growth-Pressure DecouplingStochastic IPAT, STIRPAT Regression, Stochastic Impacts by Regression on Population Affluence and Technology, Dietz-Rosa Impact Model
Liên quan34
Tóm tắtDecoupling analysis measures whether economic growth can proceed without a proportional increase in environmental pressure such as emissions, energy use, or resource consumption. The elasticity-based formulation introduced by Petri Tapio in 2005, refining the earlier OECD decoupling indicator, expresses the relationship as the ratio of the percentage change in environmental pressure to the percentage change in an economic driving force, typically GDP. This single decoupling elasticity is then sorted into a logical scheme of states — strong and weak decoupling, expansive and recessive coupling, and strong and weak negative decoupling — that distinguishes the desirable case where pressure falls while the economy grows from the undesirable case where pressure grows faster than the economy. Tapio's scheme has become a standard diagnostic for tracking progress toward green growth and sustainability.The STIRPAT model, short for Stochastic Impacts by Regression on Population, Affluence, and Technology, is a statistical reformulation of the IPAT identity that allows the drivers of environmental impact to be estimated and tested rather than merely asserted. Thomas Dietz and Eugene Rosa introduced it in 1997 to study national carbon dioxide emissions, recasting the deterministic accounting identity impact equals population times affluence times technology as a multiplicative stochastic model with an error term. Taking logarithms turns this into a linear regression whose coefficients are elasticities, the percentage change in impact associated with a one-percent change in each driver. This lets researchers ask whether impact rises strictly in proportion to population, as the original identity assumes, or whether there are increasing or decreasing returns to scale. Richard York, Rosa, and Dietz formalized and extended the approach in 2003, showing how additional drivers, quadratic terms, and panel structure can be incorporated within the same framework. STIRPAT has become the dominant quantitative tool in environmental sociology for analyzing the anthropogenic forces behind emissions, energy use, and ecological footprints.
ScholarGateBộ dữ liệu
  1. v1
  2. 1 Nguồn tài liệu
  3. PUBLISHED
  1. v1
  2. 2 Nguồn tài liệu
  3. PUBLISHED

Đến trang tìm kiếm Tải xuống bản trình chiếu

ScholarGateSo sánh phương pháp: Tapio Decoupling Analysis · STIRPAT Model. Truy cập ngày 2026-06-24 từ https://scholargate.app/vi/compare