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The impact of voluntary travel behavior change measures – A meta-analytical comparison of quasi-experimental and experimental evidence.

Authors :
Bamberg, Sebastian
Rees, Jonas
Source :
Transportation Research Part A: Policy & Practice. Jun2017, Vol. 100, p16-26. 11p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Personal travel planning (PTP) is generally regarded as an effective approach to voluntary travel behavior change in the domain of transportation research. However, this view has recently been challenged by findings from another research domain, public health research, reporting little or no effect of PTP-based interventions. We argue that these conflicting results regarding the effectiveness of PTP-based measures are due to different understandings of which research designs should be used: Transportation research tends to be based on large-scale quasi-experimental designs whereas public health research tends to favor experimental designs such as randomized control trials (RCTs). Consequently, we argue, the discrepancy may at least partly be resolved by a more nuanced position on what empirical evidence really matters when evaluating if an intervention is effective or not. In the empirical part of the paper, we meta-analytically re-analyze ten quasi-experimental PTP evaluation studies and report an experimental RCT-based study testing the effectiveness of a PTP strategy implemented in a major German city. Including all information in one meta-analytical synthesis yields a standardized effect size estimate of Cohen’s h = 0.12, documenting a small but reliable effect of PTP interventions. When implementing a PTP like one of those analyzed in this paper, in other words, we can expect an average reduction of the car modal split share of about 5 percentage points. We close by discussing the implications of our results for future PTP evaluation studies and the dispute about what kind of empirical evidence really matters when evaluating the effectiveness of PTP measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09658564
Volume :
100
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Transportation Research Part A: Policy & Practice
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
123161324
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tra.2017.04.004