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ABSTRACTThe advent of road transport automation is suggested to be one of four key technological transitions that could amount to a major transformation in mobility practices. Specifically, fully Automated Vehicles (AVs) might replace the current private car owner user model with fleets of on-demand synchronously-shared automated taxis. However, significant barriers to this vision becoming the norm remain. This paper examines two critical user-acceptance aspects of the transition: willingness to adopt AVs, and willingness to share an AV with others, particularly strangers. Our novel survey (n?=?899) included a choice experiment featuring four future full automation transport services (private, synchronously/asynchronously shared, and public). Cluster analysis examined respondents' preferences and their demographic and psycho-social characteristics. We uncover significant uncertainty about willingness to adopt automation and sharing, and important differences between clusters within our sample. For example, under 50% of participants report willingness to use an AV over their normal mode, or would prefer an automated option to a current human-driven option. Our findings raise critical questions for policymakers and transport authorities. Not least, how can AV technologies help realise the environmental and social benefits of widespread vehicle sharing in a context of a travelling public that still prefers its privacy on-the-move? 相似文献
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Batley Richard Bates John Bliemer Michiel Börjesson Maria Bourdon Jeremy Cabral Manuel Ojeda Chintakayala Phani Kumar Choudhury Charisma Daly Andrew Dekker Thijs Drivyla Efie Fowkes Tony Hess Stephane Heywood Chris Johnson Daniel Laird James Mackie Peter Parkin John Sanders Stefan Sheldon Rob Wardman Mark Worsley Tom 《Transportation》2019,46(3):583-621
Transportation - This paper provides an overview of the study ‘Provision of market research for value of time savings and reliability’ undertaken by the Arup/ITS Leeds/Accent consortium... 相似文献
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Estimation of the determinants of bicycle mode share for the journey to work using census data 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
A model is presented that relates the proportion of bicycle journeys to work for English and Welsh electoral wards to relevant
socio-economic, transport and physical variables. A number of previous studies have exploited existing disaggregate data sets.
This study uses UK 2001 census data, is based on a logistic regression model and provides complementary evidence based on
aggregate data for the determinants of cycle choice. It suggests a saturation level for bicycle use of 43%. Smaller proportions
cycle in wards with more females and higher car ownership. The physical condition of the highway, rainfall and temperature
each have an effect on the proportion that cycles to work, but the most significant physical variable is hilliness. The proportion
of bicycle route that is off-road is shown to be significant, although it displays a low elasticity (+0.049) and this contrasts
with more significant changes usually forecast by models constructed from stated preference based data. Forecasting shows
the trend in car ownership has a significant effect on cycle use and offsets the positive effect of the provision of off-road
routes for cycle traffic but only in districts that are moderately hilly or hilly. The provision of infrastructure alone appears
insufficient to engender higher levels of cycling.
John Parkin joined academia after a career in consultancy. He has experience of all stages of the promotion of transport infrastructure, from planning and modelling to design and implementation. His specialises in transport engineering with an emphasis on design innovation, sustainability principles and community benefit. Mark Wardman has been involved in transport research for over 20 years. His main research interests are in behavioural response models in general and stated preference in particular. Areas of application have included public transport, notably rail, with several novel applications to cycling and environmental issues. Matthew Page research interests include transport policy and how it has developed, the environmental impacts of transport, the impacts of transport on climate change, and walking and cycling. 相似文献
Matthew PageEmail: |
John Parkin joined academia after a career in consultancy. He has experience of all stages of the promotion of transport infrastructure, from planning and modelling to design and implementation. His specialises in transport engineering with an emphasis on design innovation, sustainability principles and community benefit. Mark Wardman has been involved in transport research for over 20 years. His main research interests are in behavioural response models in general and stated preference in particular. Areas of application have included public transport, notably rail, with several novel applications to cycling and environmental issues. Matthew Page research interests include transport policy and how it has developed, the environmental impacts of transport, the impacts of transport on climate change, and walking and cycling. 相似文献
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