Traveler Information Delivery Mechanisms

Author:

Khattak Asad J.1,Pan Xiaohong1,Williams Billy2,Rouphail Nagui3,Fan Yingling4

Affiliation:

1. Civil and Environmental Engineering Department, Old Dominion University, 135 Kaufman Hall, Norfolk VA 23529. X. Pan, California Center for Innovative Transportation, University of California at Berkeley, 2105 Bancroft Way, 3rd Floor, Berkeley, CA 94720.

2. Department of Civil Engineering, North Carolina State University, 2501 Stinson Drive, Raleigh, NC 27695.

3. Institute of Transportation Research and Education and Department of Civil Engineering, North Carolina State University, Research Building IV, 909 Capability Drive, Suite 3600, Raleigh, NC 27606.

4. College of Urban Planning and Public Affairs, University of Illinois at Chicago, 412 South Peoria Street, 215 CUPPAH, MC 348, Chicago, IL 60607.

Abstract

Advanced traveler information systems (ATISs) help individuals make informed travel decisions. Current ATIS applications encompass a variety of delivery mechanisms, including the Internet, telephone, television, radio, variable message signs, and in-vehicle navigation devices to support decisions about destinations, travel mode, departure time, routes, parking, and trip cancellation. It is important for researchers and practitioners to review the status of ATIS technologies and to understand travelers’ access and response to current ATIS deployment. Focusing on largely public-sector delivery mechanisms, this study answers two fundamental questions: whether accessing more information sources is associated with a higher likelihood of travel decision adjustments and which technologies are more likely to elicit substantive adjustments to routine travel. These questions are answered by using a comprehensive and recent behavioral data set, collected in the Research Triangle area of North Carolina. The study generates useful knowledge about how to operate existing traveler information systems more efficiently and how to improve them in the future.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference21 articles.

1. TR News 242: Critical Issues in Transportation. Transportation Research Board of the National Academies, Washington, D.C., 2006.

2. Toward the design of intelligent traveler information systems

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