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Panels for Transportation Planning argues that panels - repeated
measurements on the same sets of households or individuals over
time - can more effectively capture dynamic changes in travel
behavior, and the factors which underlie these changes, than can
conventional cross-sectional surveys. Because panels can collect
information on household attributes, attitudes and perceptions,
residential and employment choices, travel behavior and other
variables - and then can collect information on changes in these
variables over time - they help us to understand how and why people
choose to travel as they do, and how and why these choices are
likely to evolve in the future. This book is designed for a wide
audience: survey researchers who seek information on methodological
advancements and applications; transportation planners who want an
improved understanding of dynamic changes in travel behavior; and
instructors of graduate courses in urban and transportation
planning, research methods, economics, sociology, and public
policy. Each chapter has been prepared to stand alone to illustrate
a particular theme or application. The book is divided into topical
parts which address the most salient issues in the use of panels
for transportation planning: panels as evaluation tools, regional
planning applications, accounting for response bias, and modeling
and forecasting issues. These parts describe panel applications in
the US, Australia, Great Britain, Japan, and the Netherlands. Each
chapter is supplemented by extensive references; more than 400
studies, reflecting the work of more than 700 authors, are cited in
the text.
Panels for Transportation Planning argues that panels - repeated
measurements on the same sets of households or individuals over
time - can more effectively capture dynamic changes in travel
behavior, and the factors which underlie these changes, than can
conventional cross-sectional surveys. Because panels can collect
information on household attributes, attitudes and perceptions,
residential and employment choices, travel behavior and other
variables - and then can collect information on changes in these
variables over time - they help us to understand how and why people
choose to travel as they do, and how and why these choices are
likely to evolve in the future. This book is designed for a wide
audience: survey researchers who seek information on methodological
advancements and applications; transportation planners who want an
improved understanding of dynamic changes in travel behavior; and
instructors of graduate courses in urban and transportation
planning, research methods, economics, sociology, and public
policy. Each chapter has been prepared to stand alone to illustrate
a particular theme or application. The book is divided into topical
parts which address the most salient issues in the use of panels
for transportation planning: panels as evaluation tools, regional
planning applications, accounting for response bias, and modeling
and forecasting issues. These parts describe panel applications in
the US, Australia, Great Britain, Japan, and the Netherlands. Each
chapter is supplemented by extensive references; more than 400
studies, reflecting the work of more than 700 authors, are cited in
the text.
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