How the built environment shapes our daily journeys: A nonlinear exploration of home and work environments’ relationship with active travel in Shanghai, China
Huaxiong Jiang , Qinran Zhang , Kaifei Guo , Marco Helbich , Haoran Yang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
In this study, we examined the built environment’s nonlinear relationships and threshold effects on the active travel of 1,002 full-time employees in Shanghai, China. Using gradient boosting decision trees (GBDTs), we considered active travel and objectively measured and perceived built environmental correlates at both the residential and workplace levels. Our results showed that 1) both residential and workplace built environment attributes tend to have a nonlinear relationship and that threshold effects exist until active travel is related; 2) compared with the perceived built environment, the objective features of the built environment had distinct explanatory power, while the relationships followed either (inverted) V-shapes or were roughly linear; 3) relationships of the built environment, regardless of whether they were measured objectively or perceived, deviated between residential and workplace locations; and 4) the built environment was more strongly related with walking rather than cycling at both the residential and workplace levels. Overall, the findings provide policy-makers with more effective neighborhood planning strategies to facilitate active travel-friendly environments.
期刊介绍:
Transportation Research: Part A contains papers of general interest in all passenger and freight transportation modes: policy analysis, formulation and evaluation; planning; interaction with the political, socioeconomic and physical environment; design, management and evaluation of transportation systems. Topics are approached from any discipline or perspective: economics, engineering, sociology, psychology, etc. Case studies, survey and expository papers are included, as are articles which contribute to unification of the field, or to an understanding of the comparative aspects of different systems. Papers which assess the scope for technological innovation within a social or political framework are also published. The journal is international, and places equal emphasis on the problems of industrialized and non-industrialized regions.
Part A''s aims and scope are complementary to Transportation Research Part B: Methodological, Part C: Emerging Technologies and Part D: Transport and Environment. Part E: Logistics and Transportation Review. Part F: Traffic Psychology and Behaviour. The complete set forms the most cohesive and comprehensive reference of current research in transportation science.