Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Household Mobility Tool Ownership: Modeling Interactions between Cars and Season Tickets
Abstract This paper moves beyond traditional models of car ownership in that we propose a framework for modeling household-level decisions to acquire specific types and numbers of mobility tools to fulfill the mobility needs of household members. The framework is applied to a data set collected during the winter and spring of 2000/2001 in the German city Karlsruhe via an interactive web-based stated response survey in which respondents could optimize their household mobility tool sets through on-line feedback concerning the estimated costs of the sets. In our analysis, bivariate ordered probit models are estimated for three combinations of mobility tools: season tickets (i.e., transit passes) and cars, season tickets and small cars and season tickets and large cars. In all instances, strong substitution effects are found – that is, as the number of season tickets increases, the number of cars decreases. This finding underscores the need to move beyond simple models of car ownership to comprehensive models of mobility tool ownership. As demonstrated by our research, failure to do so is likely to lead to biased results.
Household Mobility Tool Ownership: Modeling Interactions between Cars and Season Tickets
Abstract This paper moves beyond traditional models of car ownership in that we propose a framework for modeling household-level decisions to acquire specific types and numbers of mobility tools to fulfill the mobility needs of household members. The framework is applied to a data set collected during the winter and spring of 2000/2001 in the German city Karlsruhe via an interactive web-based stated response survey in which respondents could optimize their household mobility tool sets through on-line feedback concerning the estimated costs of the sets. In our analysis, bivariate ordered probit models are estimated for three combinations of mobility tools: season tickets (i.e., transit passes) and cars, season tickets and small cars and season tickets and large cars. In all instances, strong substitution effects are found – that is, as the number of season tickets increases, the number of cars decreases. This finding underscores the need to move beyond simple models of car ownership to comprehensive models of mobility tool ownership. As demonstrated by our research, failure to do so is likely to lead to biased results.
Household Mobility Tool Ownership: Modeling Interactions between Cars and Season Tickets
Scott, Darren M. (Autor:in) / Axhausen, Kay W. (Autor:in)
Transportation ; 33
2006
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Englisch
Modeling Mobility Tool Ownership of Youth in Toronto, Ontario, Canada
British Library Online Contents | 2014
|Substitution between cars within the household
Elsevier | 2016
|Millennials and car ownership: Less money, fewer cars
Elsevier | 2016
|