Currently, travel diary surveys are the standard method for measuring mobility in official statistics. Nonresponse and measurement are problematic in travel surveys, due to the fact that respondents have to recall all their travels over the course of one or multiple days and have to derive distances for all these travels. To overcome these issues, new methods that rely on passive tracking of locations over time have emerged. The aim of this paper is to assess nonresponse in an experimental travel study carried out in the Netherlands. A smartphone application was developed that passively collects GPS coordinates and automatically populates a travel diary. Participants are then asked for additional information in the diary, such as travel mod...
The increasing demand for advanced modelling methods, which can reflect complex travel activities of...
Smartphones have a large potential for improving data collection by using research apps and collecti...
This paper contributes to the research on non-reporting effects in mixed-method household travel sur...
Currently, travel diary surveys are the standard method for measuring mobility in official statistic...
The increasing use of smartphones opens up opportunities for novel ways of survey data collection, b...
Objective: With the rise of Smartphone use, a new method of travel behaviour data acquisition arises...
Smartphone travel surveys are becoming of central importance in complementing traditional survey met...
Smartphone travel surveys are becoming of central importance in collecting detailed, accurate data o...
Smartphone-assisted travel surveys are becoming of central importance in collecting detailed, accura...
Data on people’s travel behaviour is typically collected using travel questionnaires, travel diaries...
Advances in smartphone technology have allowed for individuals to have access to near-continuous loc...
Advances in smartphone technology have allowed for individuals to have access to near-continuous loc...
This paper describes the setup of the Dutch Mobile Mobility Panel project, in which GPS-enabled mobi...
The Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS) co-sponsored two national random digit dial (RDD) tele...
This paper describes development and testing of a passive GPS tracking smartphone application and co...
The increasing demand for advanced modelling methods, which can reflect complex travel activities of...
Smartphones have a large potential for improving data collection by using research apps and collecti...
This paper contributes to the research on non-reporting effects in mixed-method household travel sur...
Currently, travel diary surveys are the standard method for measuring mobility in official statistic...
The increasing use of smartphones opens up opportunities for novel ways of survey data collection, b...
Objective: With the rise of Smartphone use, a new method of travel behaviour data acquisition arises...
Smartphone travel surveys are becoming of central importance in complementing traditional survey met...
Smartphone travel surveys are becoming of central importance in collecting detailed, accurate data o...
Smartphone-assisted travel surveys are becoming of central importance in collecting detailed, accura...
Data on people’s travel behaviour is typically collected using travel questionnaires, travel diaries...
Advances in smartphone technology have allowed for individuals to have access to near-continuous loc...
Advances in smartphone technology have allowed for individuals to have access to near-continuous loc...
This paper describes the setup of the Dutch Mobile Mobility Panel project, in which GPS-enabled mobi...
The Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS) co-sponsored two national random digit dial (RDD) tele...
This paper describes development and testing of a passive GPS tracking smartphone application and co...
The increasing demand for advanced modelling methods, which can reflect complex travel activities of...
Smartphones have a large potential for improving data collection by using research apps and collecti...
This paper contributes to the research on non-reporting effects in mixed-method household travel sur...