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Tempest in a teapot
by
Næss, Petter
in
Automobile travel
/ Automobiles
/ Built environments
/ Causality
/ Downtowns
/ Land Use
/ Metropolitan areas
/ Neighborhoods
/ Self-selection
/ Socioeconomics
/ Travel
/ Travel behavior
2014
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Tempest in a teapot
by
Næss, Petter
in
Automobile travel
/ Automobiles
/ Built environments
/ Causality
/ Downtowns
/ Land Use
/ Metropolitan areas
/ Neighborhoods
/ Self-selection
/ Socioeconomics
/ Travel
/ Travel behavior
2014
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Journal Article
Tempest in a teapot
2014
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Overview
While numerous studies have investigated influences of built environment characteristics on travel behavior, many scholars are concerned about the confounding effect of residential self-selection. This paper argues that the existence of transport-attitude-based residential self-selection hardly represents any threat to the validity of the basic knowledge on how residential location within urban contexts influences travel behavior. The causal mechanisms by which residential location influences travel behavior exist regardless of whether or not transport-related residential self-selection occurs. Moreover, the cases presented in this paper suggest that residential self-selection based on attitudes to travel is unlikely to represent any great source of error for parameter estimates of the effects of residential location variables on travel behavior as long as \"traditional\" demographic and socioeconomic variables have already been accounted for. The doubts raised by certain scholars about the implications of attitude-based residential self-selection for the validity of the knowledge base of land use and transportation policies thus appear to be not very well-founded.
Publisher
University of Minnesota Center for Transportation Studies,University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing
Subject
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