Determinants of Route Choice and the Value of Traveler Information: A Field Experiment |
Zhang, Lei and D. Levinson (2006) Determinants of Route Choice and the Value of Traveler Information: A Field Experiment, 06-1714, presented at the 85th Annual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board in Washington, DC, January 22-26 2006
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A major strategy of federal ITS initiatives and
state departments of transportation is to provide traveler information
to motorists through various means, including variable message signs,
the internet, telephone services like 511, in-vehicle guidance systems,
and TV and radio reports. This is relatively uncontroversial, but its
effectiveness is unknown. Drivers receive value from traveler information
in several ways, including the ability to save time, but perhaps more
importantly, other personal, social, safety, or psychological impacts
from certainty. This information can be economically valued. The benefits
of reduction in driver uncertainty when information is provided at the
beginning of the trip by various means is the main variable we aim to
measure in this research, in which we assess user preferences for routes
as a function of the presence and accuracy of information, while controlling
for other trip and route attributes, such as trip purpose, travel time,
distance, number of stops, delay, esthetics, level of commercial development,
and individual characteristics. Data is collected in a field experiment
in which more than Keywords: Value of Information, Advanced Traveler Information System (ATIS), Real-Time Traffic Operations, Travel Behavior, Spatial behavior, Wayfinding Behavior, Route Choice |
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