2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2016.06.015
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Development and test of the Perceived Accessibility Scale (PAC) in public transport

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Cited by 105 publications
(57 citation statements)
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“…The PAC consists of four items that measure the ease of travel ("It's easy to do [daily] activities with public transport"), the ability to live the life one wants ("If public transport was my only mode of travel, I'd be able to continue living the way I want"), and accessibility to activities ("It's possible to do the activities I prefer with public transport" and "Access to my preferred activities is satisfying with public transport"). These items capture the overall level of perceived accessibility on self-assessment scales, from 1-7 (1 = I disagree 7 = I completely agree) which are then indexed into an overall accessibility score, based on previous psychometric findings (Lättman et al, 2015). Cronbach's Alpha for this sample revealed a satisfying reliability of α = .88 (N=747).…”
Section: Survey and Instrumentsmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…The PAC consists of four items that measure the ease of travel ("It's easy to do [daily] activities with public transport"), the ability to live the life one wants ("If public transport was my only mode of travel, I'd be able to continue living the way I want"), and accessibility to activities ("It's possible to do the activities I prefer with public transport" and "Access to my preferred activities is satisfying with public transport"). These items capture the overall level of perceived accessibility on self-assessment scales, from 1-7 (1 = I disagree 7 = I completely agree) which are then indexed into an overall accessibility score, based on previous psychometric findings (Lättman et al, 2015). Cronbach's Alpha for this sample revealed a satisfying reliability of α = .88 (N=747).…”
Section: Survey and Instrumentsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Previous studies encompassing perceived accessibility have not been equipped with measures to quantify the results. The perceived accessibility scale (Lättman et al, 2015) was developed with the aim of capturing how easy it is to live a satisfactory life with the help of the chosen, or designated, travel mode. Without reliable measures of perceived accessibility, it is argued that evaluating and following up goals and visions regarding accessibility, from a user perspective, will be difficult, thus creating a broad and generalizable measure of perceived accessibility was needed in order to investigate or compare accessibility between different transport modes, between different groups of people, in different areas, for different purposes, or in different transport systems.…”
Section: Qualitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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