Time windows in workers' activity patterns: Empirical evidence from the Netherlands

Tim Schwanen, Martin Dijst

Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

35 Citations (Scopus)

Résumé

This paper assumes that activities at the home and work location are important determinants of individuals' paths through time and space. Fixed activities at these locations determine to a large extent the duration and timing of time windows - blocks of time available for participation in travel and out-of-home non-work activities. Taking the time spent at home and at the workplace as a starting point, this paper classifies activity patterns on workdays into six groups with distinct home- and work-stay patterns. For this, data are used from the 1998 Netherlands National Travel Survey. The six clusters vary in terms of the duration and timing of time windows and some of the differences can be explained by commute characteristics, types of non-work activities performed, workers' sociodemographic attributes, and their spatiotemporal environment. However, the impact of sociodemographic and spatiotemporal variables on cluster membership is shown to be weak.

langue originaleAnglais
Pages (de - à)261-283
Nombre de pages23
journalTransportation
Volume30
Numéro de publication3
Les DOIs
étatPublié - août 2003
Modification externeOui

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