Built environment and travel behavior: Validation and application of a continuous-treatment propensity score stratification method

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Abstract

This article discusses the validation and implementation of a propensity score approach with continuous treatment to test the existence of a causal relationship between the built environment and travel behavior using cross-sectional data. The implemented method­ology differs from previous applications in the planning literature in that it relaxes the binary treatment assumption, which polarizes the built environment into two extremes (e.g., urban vs suburban). The ef­fectiveness of the proposed methodology in reducing bias was validated via Monte Carlo simulation. The proposed approach was shown to reduce self-selection bias against Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) regres­sion in all but extreme levels of non-linearity. Empirical results suggest that an increase in urbanization has a negative effect on home-based maintenance car trip frequencies, and conversely, a positive effect on home-based maintenance non-motorized trip frequencies. Result esti­mates suggest the existence of a causal mode substitution mechanism between car and non-motorized modes given increases in the urbaniza­tion level at residential locations, thus providing some empirical sup­port to the arguments put forth by compact city advocates.

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Troncoso Parady, G., Takami, K., & Harata, N. (2017). Built environment and travel behavior: Validation and application of a continuous-treatment propensity score stratification method. Journal of Transport and Land Use, 10(1), 763–788. https://doi.org/10.5198/jtlu.2017.890

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