“…Another widely used approach for segmentation is the one proposed by Zheng et al, 2010, which relies on the same assumption as Tsui & Shalaby, 2006, namely that a traveler walks when changing transportation modes, and detects walking segments by using a loose upper bound for velocity and acceleration (2.5 m/s for velocity, and 1.5 m/s 2 for acceleration). When analyzing the travel modes, there is usually a baseline for detected modes such as walking, bicycling and motorized (Chung & Shalaby, 2005;Tsui & Shalaby, 2006;Stopher et al, 2008;Schüssler & Axhausen, 2009;Schüssler et al, 2011;Montini, Rieser-Schüssler, & Axhausen, 2014;Bohte & Maat, 2009;Biljecki et al, 2013;Zheng et al, 2010;Rasmussen, Ingvardson, Halldórsdóttir, & Nielsen, 2013Prelipcean, Gidófalvi, & Susilo, 2016), but some research goes a step further and classifies the motorized into car, train, and public transportation (Stopher et al, 2008;Schüssler & Axhausen, 2009;Schüssler et al, 2011;Bohte & Maat, 2009;Biljecki et al, 2013;Rasmussen et al, 2015;Prelipcean et al, , 2016. Of these papers, Biljecki et al, 2013 provides the most detailed classification scheme that includes 10 modes: walking, bicycling, car, ferry boat, sail boat, train, subway, bus, tram and flight.…”