Rewarding rush-hour avoidance: A study of commuters' travel behavior.
Publication date
2011
Authors
Ben Elia, E.
Ettema, D.F.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2011
Abstract
Spitsmijden, peak avoidance in Dutch, is the largest systematic effort to date to study, in
the field, the potential of rewards as a policy mean for changing commuter behavior. A
13 week field study was organized in The Netherlands with the purpose of longitudinally
investigating the impacts of rewards on commuter behavior. Different levels and types
of rewards were applied and behavior was tracked with state-of-the art detection equipment.
Based on the collected data, which included also pre and post-test measurements,
a mixed discrete choice model was estimated. The results suggest that rewards can be
effective tools in changing commuting behavior. Specifically rewards reduce the shares
of rush-hour driving, shift driving to off-peak times and increase the shares of public transport,
cycling and working from home. Mediating factors include socio-demographic characteristics,
scheduling constraints and work time flexibility, habitual behavior, attitudes to
commuting alternatives, the availability of travel information and even the weather. The
success of this study has encouraged adoption of rewards, as additional policy tools, to alleviate
congestion, especially during temporary road closures.