A GPS-aided survey for assessing trip reporting accuracy and travel of students without telephone land lines
A geo-positioning satellite (GPS)-based survey, using a web-based prompted recall tool, was conducted on a sample of 94 students at the University of Toronto from November 2008 to April 2009. The sample included students with and without telephone land lines, allowing for a statistical comparison of demographic and travel behaviour attributes. The same subjects simultaneously completed a traditional trip reporting survey, modelled on the household travel survey in Toronto, allowing for a comparison between the travel behaviour information obtained from the GPS and that reported by the participants in the traditional survey. Students with a land line are more likely to live in houses, with parents, and to live in suburban areas than students without a land line. They also make fewer trips in total, fewer discretionary trips, more transit and auto trips and fewer active trips than students without a land line. By comparing questionnaire-based data and GPS data, we found that most participants reported in the questionnaire either the same number of GPS-based trips or fewer. On average, the GPS survey captured 1.29 more daily trips per participant than the corresponding trips reported in the questionnaire.
Year of publication: |
2011
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Authors: | Dumont, Josée ; Shalaby, Amer ; Roorda, Matthew J. |
Published in: |
Transportation Planning and Technology. - Taylor & Francis Journals, ISSN 0308-1060. - Vol. 35.2011, 2, p. 161-173
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Publisher: |
Taylor & Francis Journals |
Saved in:
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