Intrapersonal day-to-day travel variability and duration of household travel surveys: Moving beyond the one-day convention

By analyzing seven-day travel logs from Los Angeles during 2011–2013, we contribute to the understanding of intrapersonal day-to-day travel variability (IDTV) in relation to socio-demographic and land-use characteristics and the implication of travel survey duration for travel parameter estimates. O...

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Main Authors: Wei Li, Douglas Houston, Marlon G. Boarnet, Han Park
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Minnesota 2018-11-01
Series:Journal of Transport and Land Use
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/984
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spelling doaj-837f25a51b7c4133857d44e0c9935e1d2021-08-31T04:36:50ZengUniversity of MinnesotaJournal of Transport and Land Use1938-78492018-11-0111110.5198/jtlu.2018.984Intrapersonal day-to-day travel variability and duration of household travel surveys: Moving beyond the one-day conventionWei Li0Douglas Houston1Marlon G. Boarnet2Han Park3Texas A&M UniversityUniversity of California, IrvineUniversity of Southern CaliforniaTexas A&M UniversityBy analyzing seven-day travel logs from Los Angeles during 2011–2013, we contribute to the understanding of intrapersonal day-to-day travel variability (IDTV) in relation to socio-demographic and land-use characteristics and the implication of travel survey duration for travel parameter estimates. Our main sample included 2,395 person-days from 352 individual participants in 219 households. Our analytical methods included linear regressions and random sampling experiments. Our Feasible Generalized Least Squares (FGLS) regression models revealed that many factors significantly influenced IDTV, such as gender, age, income, and household type. However, the observed socio-demographic and land-use characteristics could only explain a small portion of IDTV. The random sampling experiments enabled us to contrast travel variables measured from the seven-day master sample with those from subsamples of a shorter period (one to six days). The “optimal” duration for a travel survey may depend on the specific travel variables measured, and we provide evidence that studies of transit and non-motorized travel will require longer surveys than studies of car travel. In conclusion, the conventional one-day approach is likely to produce imprecise parameter estimates due to the intrapersonal day-to-day travel variability. We recommend that transportation professionals and policy makers consider shifting from the conventional one-day approach toward a multi-day approach. Surveys that focus on the modes of walking, biking, and transit should consider data collection for at least seven days.https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/984Intrapersonal day-to-day travel variabilityhousehold travel surveysurvey durationMonte Carlo experiments
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wei Li
Douglas Houston
Marlon G. Boarnet
Han Park
spellingShingle Wei Li
Douglas Houston
Marlon G. Boarnet
Han Park
Intrapersonal day-to-day travel variability and duration of household travel surveys: Moving beyond the one-day convention
Journal of Transport and Land Use
Intrapersonal day-to-day travel variability
household travel survey
survey duration
Monte Carlo experiments
author_facet Wei Li
Douglas Houston
Marlon G. Boarnet
Han Park
author_sort Wei Li
title Intrapersonal day-to-day travel variability and duration of household travel surveys: Moving beyond the one-day convention
title_short Intrapersonal day-to-day travel variability and duration of household travel surveys: Moving beyond the one-day convention
title_full Intrapersonal day-to-day travel variability and duration of household travel surveys: Moving beyond the one-day convention
title_fullStr Intrapersonal day-to-day travel variability and duration of household travel surveys: Moving beyond the one-day convention
title_full_unstemmed Intrapersonal day-to-day travel variability and duration of household travel surveys: Moving beyond the one-day convention
title_sort intrapersonal day-to-day travel variability and duration of household travel surveys: moving beyond the one-day convention
publisher University of Minnesota
series Journal of Transport and Land Use
issn 1938-7849
publishDate 2018-11-01
description By analyzing seven-day travel logs from Los Angeles during 2011–2013, we contribute to the understanding of intrapersonal day-to-day travel variability (IDTV) in relation to socio-demographic and land-use characteristics and the implication of travel survey duration for travel parameter estimates. Our main sample included 2,395 person-days from 352 individual participants in 219 households. Our analytical methods included linear regressions and random sampling experiments. Our Feasible Generalized Least Squares (FGLS) regression models revealed that many factors significantly influenced IDTV, such as gender, age, income, and household type. However, the observed socio-demographic and land-use characteristics could only explain a small portion of IDTV. The random sampling experiments enabled us to contrast travel variables measured from the seven-day master sample with those from subsamples of a shorter period (one to six days). The “optimal” duration for a travel survey may depend on the specific travel variables measured, and we provide evidence that studies of transit and non-motorized travel will require longer surveys than studies of car travel. In conclusion, the conventional one-day approach is likely to produce imprecise parameter estimates due to the intrapersonal day-to-day travel variability. We recommend that transportation professionals and policy makers consider shifting from the conventional one-day approach toward a multi-day approach. Surveys that focus on the modes of walking, biking, and transit should consider data collection for at least seven days.
topic Intrapersonal day-to-day travel variability
household travel survey
survey duration
Monte Carlo experiments
url https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/984
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