Commute trips in Norwegian cities: Data combining trip characteristics and revealed mode choice

Most transport mode choice studies rely on subjective responses to hypothetical questions (stated preference), or on revealed preferences. In stated preference studies, trip characteristics are exact, but there is a range of sources of errors and biases in the responses. Revealed preference surveys...

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Main Authors: Erik Bjørnson Lunke, Nils Fearnley, Jørgen Aarhaug
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-10-01
Series:Data in Brief
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S235234092100603X
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spelling doaj-8d3442cbbf3c4be5b78cf23b7f898e272021-08-26T04:35:17ZengElsevierData in Brief2352-34092021-10-0138107319Commute trips in Norwegian cities: Data combining trip characteristics and revealed mode choiceErik Bjørnson Lunke0Nils Fearnley1Jørgen Aarhaug2Corresponding author.; Institute of Transport Economics, Gaustadalleéen 21, Oslo 0349, NorwayInstitute of Transport Economics, Gaustadalleéen 21, Oslo 0349, NorwayInstitute of Transport Economics, Gaustadalleéen 21, Oslo 0349, NorwayMost transport mode choice studies rely on subjective responses to hypothetical questions (stated preference), or on revealed preferences. In stated preference studies, trip characteristics are exact, but there is a range of sources of errors and biases in the responses. Revealed preference surveys suffer the opposite: The choice is exact (i.e. observed) but trip attributes are uncertain – and even more uncertain when it comes to transport modes not chosen. Our dataset goes a long way in solving these problems. The data set combines real travel behaviour and mode choice data from the Norwegian National Transport Survey (NTS) with trip characteristics collected from Google maps travel planner. From the NTS, we have extracted all commute trips conducted by either private car or public transport (PT) into ten major cities in Norway with exact origin and destination coordinates. The NTS data also comprises information about age, gender, household, income and car availability. From Google maps, we have extracted trip characteristics for these trips – for both the mode chosen and the mode not chosen. This data includes total travel time, the number of interchanges, wait time, walk time, and in-vehicle time. This data can be used to study how different trip characteristics influence the probability of choosing PT over private car on commute journeys.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S235234092100603XPublic transportCommutingRevealed preferenceGoogle mapsNational travel survey
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Erik Bjørnson Lunke
Nils Fearnley
Jørgen Aarhaug
spellingShingle Erik Bjørnson Lunke
Nils Fearnley
Jørgen Aarhaug
Commute trips in Norwegian cities: Data combining trip characteristics and revealed mode choice
Data in Brief
Public transport
Commuting
Revealed preference
Google maps
National travel survey
author_facet Erik Bjørnson Lunke
Nils Fearnley
Jørgen Aarhaug
author_sort Erik Bjørnson Lunke
title Commute trips in Norwegian cities: Data combining trip characteristics and revealed mode choice
title_short Commute trips in Norwegian cities: Data combining trip characteristics and revealed mode choice
title_full Commute trips in Norwegian cities: Data combining trip characteristics and revealed mode choice
title_fullStr Commute trips in Norwegian cities: Data combining trip characteristics and revealed mode choice
title_full_unstemmed Commute trips in Norwegian cities: Data combining trip characteristics and revealed mode choice
title_sort commute trips in norwegian cities: data combining trip characteristics and revealed mode choice
publisher Elsevier
series Data in Brief
issn 2352-3409
publishDate 2021-10-01
description Most transport mode choice studies rely on subjective responses to hypothetical questions (stated preference), or on revealed preferences. In stated preference studies, trip characteristics are exact, but there is a range of sources of errors and biases in the responses. Revealed preference surveys suffer the opposite: The choice is exact (i.e. observed) but trip attributes are uncertain – and even more uncertain when it comes to transport modes not chosen. Our dataset goes a long way in solving these problems. The data set combines real travel behaviour and mode choice data from the Norwegian National Transport Survey (NTS) with trip characteristics collected from Google maps travel planner. From the NTS, we have extracted all commute trips conducted by either private car or public transport (PT) into ten major cities in Norway with exact origin and destination coordinates. The NTS data also comprises information about age, gender, household, income and car availability. From Google maps, we have extracted trip characteristics for these trips – for both the mode chosen and the mode not chosen. This data includes total travel time, the number of interchanges, wait time, walk time, and in-vehicle time. This data can be used to study how different trip characteristics influence the probability of choosing PT over private car on commute journeys.
topic Public transport
Commuting
Revealed preference
Google maps
National travel survey
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S235234092100603X
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