984 resultados para Travel behavior.
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Transportation Systems Center, Cambridge, Mass.
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Turner-Fairbank Highway Research Center, McLean, Va.
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Transportation Systems Center, Cambridge, Mass.
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Transportation Systems Center, Cambridge, Mass.
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Federal Highway Administration, Washington, D.C.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Transportation Department, Office of Transportation Policy Development, Washington, D.C.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Transportation Systems Center, Cambridge, Mass.
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Transportation Department, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Systems Development and Technology, Washington, D.C.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Transportation Department, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy and International Affairs, Washington, D.C.
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Federal Highway Administration, Washington, D.C.
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Federal Highway Administration, Washington, D.C.
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A substantial body of research is focused on understanding the relationships between socio-demographics, land-use characteristics, and mode specific attributes on travel mode choice and time-use patterns. Residential and commercial densities, inter-mixing of land uses, and route directness in conjunction with transportation performance characteristics interact to influence accessibility to destinations as well as time spent traveling and engaging in activities. This study uniquely examines the activity durations undertaken for out-of-home subsistence; maintenance, and discretionary activities. Also examined are total tour durations (summing all activity categories within a tour). Cross-sectional activities are obtained from household activity travel survey data from the Atlanta Metropolitan Region. Time durations allocated to weekdays and weekends are compared. The censoring and endogeneity between activity categories and within individuals are captured using multiple equations Tobit models. The analysis and modeling reveal that land-use characteristics such as net residential density and the number of commercial parcels within a kilometer of a residence are associated with differences in weekday and weekend time-use allocations. Household type and structure are significant predictors across the three activity categories, but not for overall travel times. Tour characteristics such as time-of-day and primary travel mode of the tours also affect traveler's out-of-home activity-tour time-use patterns.