Using trip chaining and joint travel as mediating variables to explore the relationships among travel behavior, socio-demographics and urban form

Using the 2012 Household Travel Survey data for the Cleveland metropolitan area, this study aims to examine the connections between travel behavior by using trip chaining and joint travel as mediating variables of travel distances and controlling for socio-demographics and urban form. Trip chaining...

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Main Authors: Yu-Jen Chen, Gulsah Akar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Minnesota 2017-04-01
Series:Journal of Transport and Land Use
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/882
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spelling doaj-fbfabc52bfad4f9b870a7ee0b1a2a06e2021-08-31T04:37:41ZengUniversity of MinnesotaJournal of Transport and Land Use1938-78492017-04-0110110.5198/jtlu.2017.882263Using trip chaining and joint travel as mediating variables to explore the relationships among travel behavior, socio-demographics and urban formYu-Jen Chen0Gulsah Akar1Ohio State UniversityOhio State UniversityUsing the 2012 Household Travel Survey data for the Cleveland metropolitan area, this study aims to examine the connections between travel behavior by using trip chaining and joint travel as mediating variables of travel distances and controlling for socio-demographics and urban form. Trip chaining and joint travel capture the complexity of tours and intra-household interactions, respectively. Socio-demographics represent personal and household characteristics. Urban form, which is measured not only at tour origins but also at tour destinations, helps capture the effects of residential density, retail and non-retail densities, transportation connectivity, public transit accessibility, and land-use mix. Structural equation model (SEM) approaches are applied to examine the interrelationships among these variables. The model results reveal that significant effects with expected signs exist among travel behavior: Trip chaining is negatively associated with joint travel and positively related to travel distances, and joint travel has negative effects on travel distances. Consistent with existing literature, socio-demographic attributes are strong explanatory factors of travel behavior. Urban form characteristics have significant influence on travel distances at both tour origins and destinations. The findings of this study will improve the future evaluation of transportation projects and land-use policymaking.https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/882Trip chainingjoint traveltravel distancesurban form
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yu-Jen Chen
Gulsah Akar
spellingShingle Yu-Jen Chen
Gulsah Akar
Using trip chaining and joint travel as mediating variables to explore the relationships among travel behavior, socio-demographics and urban form
Journal of Transport and Land Use
Trip chaining
joint travel
travel distances
urban form
author_facet Yu-Jen Chen
Gulsah Akar
author_sort Yu-Jen Chen
title Using trip chaining and joint travel as mediating variables to explore the relationships among travel behavior, socio-demographics and urban form
title_short Using trip chaining and joint travel as mediating variables to explore the relationships among travel behavior, socio-demographics and urban form
title_full Using trip chaining and joint travel as mediating variables to explore the relationships among travel behavior, socio-demographics and urban form
title_fullStr Using trip chaining and joint travel as mediating variables to explore the relationships among travel behavior, socio-demographics and urban form
title_full_unstemmed Using trip chaining and joint travel as mediating variables to explore the relationships among travel behavior, socio-demographics and urban form
title_sort using trip chaining and joint travel as mediating variables to explore the relationships among travel behavior, socio-demographics and urban form
publisher University of Minnesota
series Journal of Transport and Land Use
issn 1938-7849
publishDate 2017-04-01
description Using the 2012 Household Travel Survey data for the Cleveland metropolitan area, this study aims to examine the connections between travel behavior by using trip chaining and joint travel as mediating variables of travel distances and controlling for socio-demographics and urban form. Trip chaining and joint travel capture the complexity of tours and intra-household interactions, respectively. Socio-demographics represent personal and household characteristics. Urban form, which is measured not only at tour origins but also at tour destinations, helps capture the effects of residential density, retail and non-retail densities, transportation connectivity, public transit accessibility, and land-use mix. Structural equation model (SEM) approaches are applied to examine the interrelationships among these variables. The model results reveal that significant effects with expected signs exist among travel behavior: Trip chaining is negatively associated with joint travel and positively related to travel distances, and joint travel has negative effects on travel distances. Consistent with existing literature, socio-demographic attributes are strong explanatory factors of travel behavior. Urban form characteristics have significant influence on travel distances at both tour origins and destinations. The findings of this study will improve the future evaluation of transportation projects and land-use policymaking.
topic Trip chaining
joint travel
travel distances
urban form
url https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/882
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AT gulsahakar usingtripchainingandjointtravelasmediatingvariablestoexploretherelationshipsamongtravelbehaviorsociodemographicsandurbanform
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