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Title: The Reciprocal Influence of Bicycling Attitudes, Skills, and Behavior
Accession Number: 01697590
Record Type: Component
Abstract: Attitude-behavior studies in the field of travel behavior have traditionally considered attitude as a determinant of behavior without analyzing the reciprocal relationship. This omission has foundational implications for both theory testing and refinement, as well as consequences for attempts to derive policy from research findings. In this study, the authors examine the reciprocal relationships between bicycling behavior and attitudes, adding a third variable, skill, to the mix. They seek to compare the relative strength of the reciprocal relationships among these three variables and provide policy suggestions based on the results. The authors assembled a longitudinal panel of undergraduate students from the University of California, Davis by connecting their responses across multiple years of an annual campus travel survey. Using a cross-lagged panel model, they find strong, statistically significant stability relationships for all three dependent variables. Even so, bicycle use has a moderate, positive influence on skill in the subsequent year, and bicycling attitudes have a moderate, positive relationship with behavior in the following year. This research suggests that context and life stage may have moderating effects on the reciprocal relationships; while previous studies have found that behavior influences attitudes in the general population, for the undergraduate students in the authors' sample bicycling behavior has limited to no influence on behavior attitudes. Their results suggest that bicycling in college helps to improve bicycling skills, which may have enduring impacts. This study supports the notion that educational institutions can play an important role in preparing students for active travel later in life.
Supplemental Notes: This paper was sponsored by TRB committee ADB10 Standing Committee on Traveler Behavior and Values.
Report/Paper Numbers: 19-00117
Language: English
Corporate Authors: Transportation Research BoardAuthors: Pagination: 18p
Publication Date: 2019
Conference:
Transportation Research Board 98th Annual Meeting
Location:
Washington DC, United States Media Type: Digital/other
Features: Figures; References; Tables
TRT Terms: Identifier Terms: Uncontrolled Terms: Geographic Terms: Subject Areas: Pedestrians and Bicyclists; Planning and Forecasting; Society
Source Data: Transportation Research Board Annual Meeting 2019 Paper #19-00117
Files: TRIS, TRB, ATRI
Created Date: Dec 7 2018 9:32AM
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