Effect of land use and survey design on trip underreporting in Montreal and Toronto’s regional surveys

Authors

  • Chris Harding University of Toronto Transportation Research Institute (UTTRI)
  • Monika Nasterska University of Toronto Transportation Research Institute (UTTRI)
  • Leila Dianat University of Toronto Transportation Research Institute (UTTRI)
  • Eric J Miller University of Toronto Transportation Research Institute (UTTRI)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18757/ejtir.2018.18.1.3218

Abstract

This paper contributes to the literature on travel survey methods by quantifying the relationship between land use, data collection protocol and trip under-reporting in regional travel surveys. While under-reporting more broadly is a recognized problem, the significant increase in underreporting in denser, more urban-type environments identified here has never before been demonstrated or measured. Consequences of this land use-related bias for transportation planning and modelling are explored. The work is carried out by comparing the results of two very similar household travel surveys conducted in 2011 and 2013, in Toronto and Montreal respectively. Using data on over 350,000 persons, a binary logit model for discretionary trip making is estimated and the effects of land use and data collection protocol on under-reporting are isolated. This is done by controlling for mobility tool access, household type and other key determinants of travel demand. Counterintuitive effects for urban type environments found indicate the under-reporting effect is equivalent to a reduction in the pre-existing odds of reporting discretionary trip making in more urban environments of 19 to 29%. When combined with Toronto’s data collection protocol effect, the range increases to 39 to 55%. Results should be of use to transportation planning authorities wishing to make better use of the data collected in large surveys. Recognizing some of the flaws and biases in what is reported, these authorities can complement existing sources of data or modify their approaches to demandbased infrastructure provision to better account for the large number of, largely pedestrian, unreported trips.

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Published

2018-01-01

How to Cite

Harding, C., Nasterska, M., Dianat, L., & Miller, E. J. (2018). Effect of land use and survey design on trip underreporting in Montreal and Toronto’s regional surveys. European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research, 18(1). https://doi.org/10.18757/ejtir.2018.18.1.3218

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Articles