This paper examines the daily activity-travel behavior of undergraduate students, graduate students, faculty, and staff at a large university to better understand their activity travel demands for automobile, active transportation (AT), and transit trips. The data were derived from the first university-based activity travel diary survey [Environmentally Aware Travel Diary Survey (EnACT)] conducted in spring 2016 at Dalhousie University, Canada. Results show that students reside nearer to the campus than faculty and staff, and their trip length from home to school is significantly shorter. Zero-inflated negative binomial (ZINB) models show that if housing tenure is less than 1 year, it is more likely that the traveler will make more AT trips but fewer automobile trips. It indicates that individuals living far from the campus will produce fewer transit trips than those who live nearer. Interestingly, the mean number of AT trips per day for the overall sample is more than one trip, whereas for automobile trips and transit trips it is less than one. The behavioral analysis and empirical models provide useful insights that can be utilized to represent university populations in regional travel demand models, as well as to develop campus-based travel demand management (TDM) strategies.
This paper investigates the frequency and the duration of participation in physical activity by children who go to school in the city of Dhaka, Bangladesh. The study uses data from a 2012 activity-based travel diary survey of 245 students in Grades 6 to 10 in the Dhaka metropolitan area. To explore the trade-offs between factors that affect the frequency of out-of-home physical activity, including the use of active transportation, this study used a zero-inflated Poisson (ZIP) regression model. Additionally, parametric hazard models were estimated to examine the duration of physical activities. The results of the ZIP count model suggest that personal and household characteristics, attributes of the built environment, and time commitments for other mandatory and discretionary activities influence the frequency of participation in physical activity. For example, an increase in the number of children in the household and the presence of sidewalks increased the frequency of out-of home, out-of-school physical activity if everything else was held equal. In contrast, travel time to school, the presence of traffic intersections, and the time commitment for tutoring sessions negatively affected participation in physical activity. In the modeling of the duration of out-of-home physical activity, this study found that a Weibull parametric hazard model outperformed a log logistic model. The duration was influenced by sociodemographic characteristics, spatial context, and escort arrangements. For instance, car ownership and a parental escort increased the duration of physical activity. The paper offers an in-depth behavioral understanding of children's physical activities in a developing country.
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