Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
141297 Travel Behaviour and Society 2016 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

There is much debate among transportation researchers, practitioners, and policymakers regarding how the opening up of the online world is impacting on people’s physical spatio-temporal patterns.This paper presents a novel analysis of the relationship between internet usage and time use, with time spent traveling (during the course of a 24-h day) and aggregate time spent at out-of-home activities analyzed separately. The empirical analysis draws on the Scottish Household Survey, which contains a unique combination of a one-day travel diary paired with a pseudo-diary of online behavior that captures three distinct dimensions of internet activity: the amount of time that respondents spend online per week, the types of tele-activities that they perform, and where they access the internet.The empirical findings include both ceteris paribus statistical association of specific dimensions of internet usage and aggregate (multi-dimensional) relationships. The latter suggest that (in the context of this dataset), internet usage correlates positively, net of confounding effects, with both time spent traveling and time spent at out-of-home activities.

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