1 / 10

Impacts of Proxy Reporting in Household Surveys on Trip Rates

Impacts of Proxy Reporting in Household Surveys on Trip Rates. Ed Hard | David Pearson. 13 th TRB Transportation Planning Applications Conference Reno , NV May 12, 2011. What We Did….

onan
Download Presentation

Impacts of Proxy Reporting in Household Surveys on Trip Rates

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Impacts of Proxy Reporting in Household Surveys on Trip Rates Ed Hard | David Pearson 13th TRB Transportation Planning Applications Conference Reno, NV May 12, 2011

  2. What We Did…. • Analyzed difference in the number of trips reported by respondent, proxy, and diary • Used data from 3 HH surveys • All surveys used same methodology and instruments • Person trips compared and evaluated by retrieval method

  3. Evaluation of Person Trips • Compiled and compared for respondent, proxy, and diary methods by • Aggregate totals by urban area • Per person by age cohort • Per person by HH size and income • Various categories of person and HH lifecycles • HBW, HBNW, NHB by area and by age cohort, HH size and income, and lifecycle

  4. Comparison of Person Trip Rates • Calculated difference in rates to determine if statistically significant difference between • Respondent and proxy • Respondent and diary • Proxy and diary • Used test statistic

  5. Summary of Findings • Person trip rates for respondent 25 to 45 % higher than proxy; for diary 58-95% higher than proxy • When stratified by age cohorts, rates for respondent and diary consistently higher than proxy • No significant difference in male vs. female rates • Significant under-reporting of adults represented by proxy

  6. RIO GRANDE VALLEY Comparison of Trip Rates by Retrieval Method AUSTIN AMARILLO

  7. Summary of Findings • Appears to be a tendency to over-report HBW trips and under-report HBNW and NHB • Potential impact of this on TDMs and estimates of total travel is significant • Trip rates essentially the same for the three areas for each method of data retrieval • Implies raw survey data may be combined between urban areas and weighted to represent local conditions • Analysis of Houston HH survey data reveals same general findings on person trip rates in relation to retrieval method

  8. Comparison of Trip Rates by Purpose by Retrieval Method Results/Trends Similar for All Areas RIO GRANDE VALLEY RIO GRANDE VALLEY RIO GRANDE VALLEY

  9. Recommendations For Texas Travel Survey Program • Allow no more than 20 percent of individuals over age 15 to be represented by proxy • Modify HH survey analyses to include development of adjustment rates by age cohort and purpose for proxy individuals • Research to examine combining unweighted HH surveys from different areas to develop trip rates for areas without HH surveys

  10. QUESTIONS Ed Hard (979) 845-8539 e-hard@tamu.edu David Pearson (979) 845-9933 d-pearson@tamu.edu

More Related