Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 16 segundos...
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Context-driven regret-based model of travel behavior under uncertainty: a latent class approach

Eleni Charoniti    
Soora Rasouli    
Harry J.P. Timmermans    

Resumen

Understanding variability in observed travel behavior has been one of the major research topics in travel behavior analysis and travel demand modeling. Differences in outcomes of travel decisions can be attributed to observed and non-observed differences between travelers and different situations and contexts in which decisions are made. The majority of studies in transportation research have estimated the effects of observed socio-demographic profiles on choice probabilities under certainty. Unobserved heterogeneity in utility functions has been typically examined using mixed logit or latent class models. The focus of the current paper concerns the effect of context and personality traits on decision-making under uncertainty, a combination of factors that has received not much attention in transportation research to date. Using route choice in an activity context as an example, we estimate a latent class random regret-minimization model, which takes into account the travel time and therefore arrival time uncertainty that people face when making route choice decisions. In addition, it incorporates the effects of personality traits, socio-demographic profiles and contextual factors, which increase or decrease travelers? feelings of regret. The model is estimated based on a stated choice experiment, which was administered through a Web-based survey. Results suggest the existence of three latent classes underlying differences in regret-driven choice behavior.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Yang-Kuei Lin, Chien-Fu Chen and Tien-Yin Chou    
Convenience store chains are many people?s top choice for dining and leisure and have logistics procedures that involve each store receiving multiple deliveries because of the varying delivery periods and suitable temperatures for different goods. The es... ver más
Revista: Algorithms

 
Santiago Felici-Castell, Emilio Fernandez-Vargas, Jaume Segura-Garcia, Juan J. Perez-Solano, Rafael Fayos-Jordan and Jesus Lopez-Ballester    
There is clear evidence of the effects of air pollution on health. In this paper, we present an innovative application designed to assess Air Quality (AQ) exposure based on the World Health Organization?s AQ Guidelines, analysing pollutants and their con... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
João de Abreu e Silva, Shanna Lucchesi     Pág. 315 - 332
Global South cities are vastly underrepresented in the literature that analyzes the relationships between location choice, land-use patterns and travel behavior. This paper aims to reduce that underrepresentation by bringing new evidence from a metropoli... ver más

 
Rozaliia Tarnovetckaia and Hamid Mostofi    
The impacts of ICT-based mobility services vary in different cities, depending on socioeconomic, urban form, and cultural parameters. The impacts of car-sharing and ridesourcing on public transport have not been investigated appropriately in post-Soviet ... ver más
Revista: Urban Science

 
Younes Delhoum, Rachid Belaroussi, Francis Dupin and Mahdi Zargayouna    
For too long, many refined transportation models have focused solely on private and public transportation, assuming that bicycles only require simple models, such as bird flight distance or trips on horizontal tracks at a constant speed. This paper aims ... ver más
Revista: Infrastructures