Trading off Time, Carbon, Active Travel, and Health: What do People Really Think about Traffic-reduction Measures?

T. Cohen, Jamie Furlong, Lucy I. Farrow
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

An online survey polled a socio-demographically representative sample of approximately 2,000 UK residents concerning their attitudes to traffic restrictions that lead to longer car trips. Specifically, to what extent would respondents accept delays to everyday local car journeys if these were offset by reductions in NO2, greenhouse gas emissions or vehicular traffic, or by increases in active travel? Responses suggested high levels of acceptance of delay but this varied by nature of impact (less openness to increased active travel) and socio-demographic attribute (gender, educational attainment, car ownership, ethnicity, housing tenure, prior presence of local traffic restrictions). In particular, there were lower levels of delay acceptance amongst men, respondents without degree-level qualifications, and those in households with two or more cars. These findings are relevant to those communicating about traffic restrictions, in terms of which audiences they target and how they present impacts.
权衡时间、碳排放、主动出行和健康:人们对交通减少措施的真实看法?
一项在线调查调查了大约2000名英国居民的社会人口学代表性样本,询问他们对交通限制导致开车旅行时间延长的态度。具体来说,如果二氧化氮、温室气体排放或车辆交通的减少,或主动出行的增加,可以抵消这些延误,受访者在多大程度上接受当地汽车每天出行的延误?回应表明,人们对延误的接受程度很高,但这一程度因影响的性质(对增加的主动旅行的开放程度较低)和社会人口统计属性(性别、受教育程度、汽车拥有量、种族、住房使用权、当地交通限制的先前存在)而异。特别是,男性、没有学位资格的受访者以及家庭拥有两辆或更多汽车的受访者对延迟的接受程度较低。这些发现与那些传播交通限制的人有关,就他们的目标受众以及他们如何呈现影响而言。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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