Prelims

Transport Survey Methods

ISBN: 978-1-84-855844-1, eISBN: 978-1-84-855845-8

Publication date: 2 November 2009

Citation

(2009), "Prelims", Bonnel, P., Lee-Gosselin, M., Zmud, J. and Madre, J.-L. (Ed.) Transport Survey Methods, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, p. i. https://doi.org/10.1108/9781848558458-037

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2009 Emerald Group Publishing Limited


Prelims

Half Title Page

TRANSPORT SURVEY METHODS: KEEPING UP WITH A CHANGING WORLD

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HENSHER Traffic Safety and Human Behavior
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HIMANEN, LEE-GOSSELIN & PERRELS Building Blocks for Sustainable Transport
ELVIK & VAA The Handbook of Road Safety Measures
BEN-AKIVA, MEERSMAN & VAN DE VOORDE Recent Developments in Transport Modeling: Lessons for the Freight Sector

Title Page

TRANSPORT SURVEY METHODS: KEEPING UP WITH A CHANGING WORLD

EDITED BY

PATRICK BONNEL

ENTPE-LET, Lyon, France

MARTIN LEE-GOSSELIN

Université Laval, Québec, Canada

JOHANNA ZMUD

NuStats, USA

JEAN-LOUP MADRE

INRETS, Paris, France

United Kingdom • North America • Japan

India • Malaysia • China

Copyright Page

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Howard House, Wagon Lane, Bingley BD16 1WA, UK

First edition 2009

Copyright © 2009 Emerald Group Publishing Limited

No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without either the prior written permission of the publisher or a licence permitting restricted copying issued in the UK by The Copyright Licensing Agency and in the USA by The Copyright Clearance Center. No responsibility is accepted for the accuracy of information contained in the text, illustrations or advertisements. The opinions expressed in these chapters are not necessarily those of the Editor or the publisher.

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

ISBN: 978-1-84855-845-8

List of Contributors

Elizabeth S. Ampt Sinclair Knight Merz, Adelaide, Australia
Carlos H. Arce Mygistics-NuStats, Austin, TX, USA
Jimmy Armoogum French National Institute of Research on Transports and Safety (INRETS-DEST), Noisy, France
Kay W. Axhausen Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich — Institut for Transport Planning and Systems (ETHZ-IVT), Zurich, Switzerland
Earl J. Baker Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA
Caroline Bayart LET-ENTPE-CNRS-Université Lyon 2, Lyon, France
Roger Behrens University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa
Patrick Bonnel LET-ENTPE-CNRS-Université Lyon 2, Lyon, France
Peter Bonsall Institute for Transport Studies, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK
Mark Bradley Bradley Research and Consulting, Santa Barbara, CA, USA
Stacey Bricka NuStats, Austin, TX, USA
Werner Brög Socialdata, Munich, Germany
Michael Browne University of Westminster, London, UK
Linda Cherrington Texas Transportation Institute, The Texas A&M University System, Houston, TX, USA
Kelly J. Clifton University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA
Heather Contrino Federal Highway Administration, USA
Eric Cornelis FUNDP, University of Namur, Belgium
Matthieu de Lapparant INRETS, Noisy-le-Grand Cedex, Paris, France
Sean T. Doherty Department of Geography & Environmental Studies, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
Mark Freedman Westat, Rockville, MD, USA
Regine Gerike University of Technology, Munich, Germany
Jane Gould University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
E. Hato Behavior in Networks Studies Unit, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
Peter Jones University College London, London, UK
Dominika Kalinowska German Institute for Economic Research, DIW Berlin, Germany
Ian Ker CATALYST, WA, Australia
Kara Kockelman University of Texas at Austin, TX, USA
Stephan Krygsman University of Stellenbosch, South Africa
Catherine T. Lawson University at Albany, State University of New York, Albany, NY, USA
Martin Lee-Gosselin Université Laval, ESAD-CRAD, Québec, Canada
Jacques Leonardi University of Westminster, London, UK
Bob Leore Department of Transport, Ottawa, Canada
Jean-Loup Madre INRETS, Paris, France
Michael Manore Vispective Management Consulting, USA
Nancy McGuckin Travel Behavior Associates, South Pasadena, CA, USA
Alan McKinnon Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, UK
Arnim Meyburg Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA
Catherine Morency Ecole Polytechnique de Montréal, MADITUC-CIRRELT, Canada
Elaine Murakami Federal Highway Administration, Seattle, WA, USA
Sharon O’Connor Resource Systems Group, White River Junction, VT, USA
Juan de Dios Ortúzar Department of Transport Engineering and Logistics, Pontificia Universidad Catoĺica de Chile, Santiago, Chile
Peter Ottmann Institute for Transport Studies, Karlsruhe, Germany
Danièle Patier LET, Université de Lyon, France
Alan Pisarski Consultant, Falls Church, VA, USA
John W. Polak Centre for Transport Studies, Imperial College London, UK
Martine Quaglia INED-SFS, Paris, France
Tim Raimond Transport Data Centre, NSW Transport and Infrastructure, Australia
Benoît Riandey INED-SFS, Paris, France
Anthony J. Richardson The Urban Transport Institute (TUTI), Victoria, Australia
Matthew Roorda University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
Jean-Louis Routhier LET, Université de Lyon, France
Gerd Sammer Institute for Transport Studies, University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences, Vienna, Austria
Giorgia Servente DITIC, Politecnico di Torino, Torino, Italy
Peter R. Stopher The Institute of Transport and Logistics Studies, The University of Sydney, Australia
Orlando Strambi Escola Politécnica da Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil
Christophe Terrier INSEE, France
H. J. P. Timmermans Urban Planning Group, Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands
Martin Trépanier Ecole Polytechnique, University of Montreal, Canada
Klaas van Zyl SSI Engineers and Environmental Consultants, South Africa
Chester Wilmot Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, USA
Jean Wolf GeoStats, Atlanta, GA, USA
Johanna Zmud NuStats, USA
Dirk Zumkeller Institute for Transport Studies, Karlsruhe, Germany

Preface

About every three years the international transport survey community gets together to discuss innovation and quality in transport survey methods and document those discussions in a publication. As this has been happening since 1979, one has to ask: Do we really need another book on survey methods in transport? The answer is ‘Yes, If…’ with the ‘If’ involving whether there have been recent changes that make the capture of transportation data through surveys materially different than they were years ago when other books on the topic were published. One obvious example of a recent change is the need for new data, models, and other analytical tools to support greenhouse gas (GHG) reduction and energy efficiency policies in nations around the globe. Another example is the proliferation of new and affordable information technologies that survey designers can employ to collect and process data, helping them confront increasing barriers to participation in surveys, barriers that in some cases arise from the same technologies, such as developments in telephony. This book focuses on such changes, and on the opportunities and challenges they represent, both for improved survey methods and for the comparability of the data that they provide to different agencies and countries.

As statistical surveys attempt to address GHG issues, and other important transportation policy and planning challenges, they exhibit evidence of success, yet at the same time they frequently come under threat. The evidence of success is that surveys are ubiquitous in the transport world. Almost all countries in the world use them to measure passenger travel, freight movements, or public transit ridership. Leaders in government use survey results to guide policy, and the call from their advisors for more data to address greater challenges is increasing. However, funding for data collection is too often an easy target in difficult economic times, such as the present, and surveys must be credible, transparent, and of assured quality. The papers in this book are thus relevant to government, transport industry practitioners, academic scientists, and commercial researchers.

The book provides a review of the current state of transport survey methods for capturing data in several key areas: freight, personal travel, tourism, evacuations and related travel, and the environmental footprint of transport, among others. It captures the essence of discussions at the 8th International Conference on Survey Methods in Transport that took place in Annecy, France, in 2008. Conference participants from over 25 countries included leading survey researchers and transport professionals representing industry and government policy makers, as well as academic scholars and researchers.

The Annecy Conference succeeded in its main objectives: sharing up-to-date information and experiences on transport survey methods; fostering discussion of mutual problems and issues that affect survey design, data processing, and reporting; proposing and suggesting new initiatives and future approaches for the measurement of critical transportation system indicators; and feeding the results of these discussions into a permanent record in the form of this peer-reviewed book. The book is not a proceedings volume, but a peer-reviewed selection of about one-third of the papers that were presented, as well as a synthesis of 16 workshops.

An editorial committee guided the work that led to this book. It consisted of the four co-editors: Patrick Bonnel, Martin Lee-Gosselin, Jean-Loup Madre, and Johanna Zmud, who also served as co-chairs of the Conference. These four, together with the help of Jimmy Armoogum, divided up the editorial oversight. They built on the considerable efforts of the many people and organizations, recognized in the Acknowledgements that follow. We are indebted to all those who donated their time and energy to review, critique, and add to our body of knowledge about transport survey methods, in order to continuously improve the quality of transport surveys and enhance the value and utility of the data that such surveys provide for transport policy and decision-making.

Finally we, the co-chairs of the ISCTSC, thank all the Annecy authors for their diligence and hard work. We are confident that their continued diligence will lead to new insights for, and new approaches in, transport survey methods.

Martin Lee-Gosselin

Johanna Zmud

ISCTSC Co-Chairs

Acknowledgements

The series of international transport survey conferences and the published record is under the responsibility of the ISCTSC. For the period leading up to the Annecy Conference through to the completion of this book, the members were:

International Steering Committee for Travel Survey Conferences (ISCTSC)
Tom Adler Resource Systems Group, Inc. U.S.A.
Carlos Arce NuStats, Inc. U.S.A.
Chandra Bhat2 University of Texas U.S.A.
Werner Brög Socialdata, GmbH Germany
Patrick Bonnel ENTPE France
Kelly Clifton2 University of Maryland U.S.A.
Peter Jones University College, London United Kingdom
Ryuichi Kitamura1 Kyoto University Japan
Stephan Krygsman2 Stewart Scott, Inc. South Africa
Martin Lee-Gosselin (Co-Chair) Université Laval Canada
Jean-Loup Madre INRETS France
Arnim Meyburg Cornell University U.S.A.
Catherine Morency2 Polytechnique de Montréal Canada
Elaine Murakami1 FHWA U.S.A.
Juan de Dios Ortuzar Pontificia Universidad Católica Chile
Alan Pisarski Consultant U.S.A.
Tony Richardson The Urban Transport Institute Australia
Gerd Sammer Universität für Bodenkultuur Austria
Cheryl Stecher1 IBM U.S.A.
Orlando Strambi Universidade de São Paulo Brazil
Peter Stopher University of Sydney Australia
Harry Timmermans Technical University of Eindhoven Netherlands
Klaas van Zyl1 Stewart Scott, Inc. South Africa
Chester Wilmot Louisiana State University U.S.A.
Johanna Zmud (Co-Chair) NuStats, Inc. U.S.A.
Dirk Zumkeller Universität Karlsruhe Germany
1

Member until October 2008.

2

Member from October 2008.

It was with great sadness that we learnt, in February 2009, of the death of Ryuichi Kitamura. Ryuichi was a source of endless energy and inspiration among the international community of those concerned with data on travel, communication and activities. He saw well beyond transport networks, caring deeply about the data needed to help communities become more responsive to human values. He was one of a kind and we miss him very much.

The success of the Annecy Conference was owed to nearly two years of painstaking preparations by the Local Organising Committee (LOC) in France, co-chaired by Patrick Bonnel and Jean-Loup Madre, both of whom have also been longstanding members of the International Steering Committee (ISCTSC), and who took a very active role in the scientific programme as well. The LOC comprised:

Patrick Bonnel, Laboratoire d'Economie des Transports (LET-ENTPE) (Co-Chair)

Jean-Loup Madre, Institut National de la Recherche sur les Transports et leur Sécurité (INRETS) (Co-Chair)

Jimmy Armoogum, Institut National de la Recherche sur les Transports et leur Sécurité (INRETS)

Gerard Brun, Ministère français de l’Ecologie, de l’Energie du développement durable et de la Mer, direction de la recherche et de l’animation scientifique et technique (DRAST)

Marc Christine, Institut National de la Statistique et des Etudes Economiques (INSEE)

Mary Crass, International Transport Forum (ECMT/OECD)

Marie-Odile Gascon, Centre d’Etudes sur les Réseaux, les Transports, l’Urbanisme et les constructions (CERTU)

Emmanuel Raoul, Ministère français de l’Ecologie, de l’Energie du développement durable et de la Mer

In addition, our sincere thanks to Christophe Rizet of INRETS for all the arrangements needed to make possible holding the final meeting of COST Programme 355 in collaboration with the ISCTSC meeting.

A meeting of the size of the Annecy Conference also depended on the support of many staff. We are particularly indebted to Florence Toilier of ENTPE for her patient resolution of many logistical questions and the production of the conference CDROM, Peter Endemann of Planungsverband Ballungsraum Frankfurt/Rhein-Main and the ETC for so effectively running the Conference secretariat at Annecy (in five languages), to Pierre-Olivier Flavigny and Philippe Marchal of INRETS for organising the most hospitable Internet facilities that any of us have seen heretofore at a conference, and to the staff of Les Balcons du Lac d’Annecy.

The ISCTSC would also like to recognise that the Annecy Conference would not have been possible without the generosity of our sponsors, who provided financial, material and/or staff support. In addition, the sponsors made it possible to continue ISCTSC’s commitment to invest in our future by providing scholarships to participants from lower-income countries and some support to new researchers and students. They were:

  • La Direction de la recherche et de l’animation scientifique et technique (DRAST), Ministère français de l’Ecologie, de l’Energie du développement durable et de la Mer

  • Ecole Nationale des Travaux Publics de l’Etat (ENTPE), France

  • Institut National de la Recherche sur les Transports et leur Sécurité (INRETS), France

  • Laboratoire d’Economie des Transports (LET), France

  • NuStats, United States

  • PTV AG, Germany

  • Service de l’Observation et des Statistiques (SOeS), Ministère français de l’Ecologie, de l’Energie du développement durable et de la Mer

  • The Urban Transport Institute (TUTI), Australia

In addition to these sponsors, we are most grateful for the many individuals in the world community of transport survey researchers and practitioners who donated their time and expertise as authors, reviewers, chairs, discussants and rapporteurs. More than 100 extended abstracts and papers were reviewed, and in the case of papers selected for this book, by three reviewers.

The preparation of the book was greatly aided by the counsels of Zoe Sanders and Claire Ferres of Emerald Group Publishing Limited, and the work of ISCTSC’s copy-editor Christopher Parker. We thank them for their attention to detail.

Prelims
PART I: INTRODUCTION
1. Keeping Up with a Changing World: Challenges in the Design of Transport Survey Methods
2. The Travel Survey Toolkit: Where to From Here?
PART II: SUSTAINABILITY AND TRAVELLER ADAPTATION
3. What is so Special about Surveys Designed to Investigate the Environmental Sustainability of Travel Behaviour?
4. Evolving Behaviour in the Context of Interest in Environmental Sustainability: Synthesis of a Workshop
5. Myths, (Mis)Perceptions and Reality in Measuring Voluntary Behavioural Changes
6. Surveys for Behavioural Experiments: Synthesis of a Workshop
PART III: GLOBAL SOCIAL ISSUES
7. Surveying Hard-to-Reach Groups
8. The Challenges of Surveying ‘Hard to Reach’ Groups: Synthesis of a Workshop
9. Emerging Methods and Technologies for Tracking Physical Activity in the Built Environment
10. Physical Activity in the Built Environment: Synthesis of a Workshop
11. Acquiring Data on Travel Behaviour During Emergencies and Exceptional Events
12. Capturing Travel Behavior during Exceptional Events: Synthesis of a Workshop
13. Tourist Flows and Inflows: On Measuring Instruments and the Geomathematics of Flows
14. Surveys of Tourists and Transients: Synthesis of a Workshop
PART IV: FREIGHT AND TRANSIT PLANNING
15. How to Improve the Capture of Urban Goods Movement Data?
16. Surveys on Urban Freight Transport: Synthesis of a Workshop
17. The Collection of Long-Distance Road Freight Data in Europe
18. The Acquisition of Long-Distance Freight Data: Synthesis of a Workshop
19. Identifying and Reconciling the Data Needs of Public Transit Planning, Marketing and Performance Measurement
20. Data for Public Transit Planning, Marketing and Model Development: Synthesis of a Workshop
PART V: TECHNOLOGY APPLICATIONS
21. Collecting and Processing Data from Mobile Technologies
22. Mobile Technologies: Synthesis of a Workshop
23. What Is Different About Non-Response in GPS-Aided Surveys?
24. Nonresponse Challenges in GPS-Based Surveys: Synthesis of a Workshop
25. Electronic Instrument Design and User Interfaces for Activity-Based Modeling
26. Electronic Instrument Design and User Interfaces: Synthesis of a Workshop
27. Visualize This: Opportunities and Challenges for the Travel Survey Community
28. Data Visualization Techniques: Synthesis of a Workshop
PART VI: EMERGING/PERSISTENT SURVEY ISSUES AND DATA HARMONISATION
29. Large-Scale Ongoing Mobility Surveys: The State of Practice
30. Moving from Cross-Sectional to Continuous Surveying: Synthesis of a Workshop
31. Moving Towards Continuous Collection of Large-Scale Mobility Surveys: Are There Compelling Reasons? A Discussant Response
32. Vehicle-Based Surveys: Towards More Accurate and Reliable Data Collection Methods
33. Vehicle-Based Surveys: Synthesis of a Workshop
34. Survey Mode Integration and Data Fusion: Methods and Challenges
35. Best Practices in Data Fusion: Synthesis of a Workshop
36. Lessons from an Overview of National Transport Surveys, from Working Group 3 of COST 355: ‘Changing Behavior Toward a More Sustainable Transport System’
Subject Index