Empirical observations were carried out using a six-week travel survey, Mobidrive, in order to probe into the optimal duration problem of a single wave travel survey. The regressions on certain travel elements (i.e., number of daily trips, VKM per day, number of home based trip chains, daily travel time expenditure) suggest that a two-week survey duration might serve well to represent personal variability in various dimensions. However further analysis carried out by using nonparametric survival analysis points to a longer period as the elapsed time between activity participation does not seem to converge to true values, at least for rare activities such as recreation
Many studies have analysed travel times and activity times. For example it seems natural to observe ...
textMany surveys suffer from low response rates and therefore carry a risk of nonresponse bias. The ...
Multiday travel behavior was examined as a stochastic process, and new empirical findings are offere...
By analyzing seven-day travel logs from Los Angeles during 2011–2013, we contribute to the understan...
Traditional household travel surveys ask respondents to report their travel behaviour for a 24-hour ...
This paper introduces a new long-duration travel diary survey undertaken in a small town and rural e...
AbstractAn in-depth understanding of travel behaviour determinants, including the relationship to no...
The paper uses a unique multi-day multi-wave panel dataset of households and their travel to conduct...
This paper combines both quantitative and qualitative methods to provide supplemental information an...
There is a strong consensus in the travel behaviour research community that the one day travel diary...
The paper uses a unique multi-day multi-wave panel dataset of households and their travel to conduct...
This paper studies intertemporal changes in the value of travel time (VTT) and investigates whether ...
This paper jointly examines the length between successive participations in several activity purpose...
Travel demand models are usually estimated using cross-sectional data. Although the use of panel dat...
Temporal rhythms in travel and activity patterns are analysed thanks to a seven-day travel diary col...
Many studies have analysed travel times and activity times. For example it seems natural to observe ...
textMany surveys suffer from low response rates and therefore carry a risk of nonresponse bias. The ...
Multiday travel behavior was examined as a stochastic process, and new empirical findings are offere...
By analyzing seven-day travel logs from Los Angeles during 2011–2013, we contribute to the understan...
Traditional household travel surveys ask respondents to report their travel behaviour for a 24-hour ...
This paper introduces a new long-duration travel diary survey undertaken in a small town and rural e...
AbstractAn in-depth understanding of travel behaviour determinants, including the relationship to no...
The paper uses a unique multi-day multi-wave panel dataset of households and their travel to conduct...
This paper combines both quantitative and qualitative methods to provide supplemental information an...
There is a strong consensus in the travel behaviour research community that the one day travel diary...
The paper uses a unique multi-day multi-wave panel dataset of households and their travel to conduct...
This paper studies intertemporal changes in the value of travel time (VTT) and investigates whether ...
This paper jointly examines the length between successive participations in several activity purpose...
Travel demand models are usually estimated using cross-sectional data. Although the use of panel dat...
Temporal rhythms in travel and activity patterns are analysed thanks to a seven-day travel diary col...
Many studies have analysed travel times and activity times. For example it seems natural to observe ...
textMany surveys suffer from low response rates and therefore carry a risk of nonresponse bias. The ...
Multiday travel behavior was examined as a stochastic process, and new empirical findings are offere...