Interpersonal and intrapersonal variabilities in daily activity-travel patterns: A Networked spatiotemporal analysis

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Abstract

Interpersonal and intrapersonal variabilities are two important perspectives to understand daily travel behaviors, while only a small number of studies incorporate them for understanding human dynamics. This paper employed a network analysis approach to detecting daily activitytravel patterns of 680 Beijing’s residents within a week and then used a multilevel multinomial logit model to analyze the intrapersonal variability in patterns and the socioeconomic linkages behind them. Results suggest that most activity-travel patterns have significant day-to-day intrapersonal and interpersonal variabilities. This suggests that the application of a typical day of activity-travel behaviors to measure and represent a week’s or even longer-term behaviors may be biased, due to the existence of day-to-day intrapersonal variability. This study also provides a hint for the selection of days of a week to conduct a diary survey for activity pattern mining or travel demand modeling.

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Zhang, W., Ji, C., Yu, H., Zhao, Y., & Chai, Y. (2021). Interpersonal and intrapersonal variabilities in daily activity-travel patterns: A Networked spatiotemporal analysis. ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information, 10(3). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi10030148

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