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Public transit use in the United States in the era of COVID-19: Transit riders' travel behavior in the COVID-19 impact and recovery period

机译:在Covid-19时代的美国在美国的公共交通使用:Covid-19影响和恢复期间的过境车手的旅行行为

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COVID-19 has upended travel across the world, disrupting commute patterns, mode choices, and public transit systems. In the United States, changes to transit service and reductions in passenger volume due to COVID-19 are lasting longer than originally anticipated. In this paper we examine the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on individual travel behavior across the United States. We analyze mobility data from Janurary to December 2020 from a sample drawn from a nationwide smartphone-based panel curated by a private firm, Embee Mobile. We combine this with a survey that we administered to that sample in August 2020. Our analysis provides insight into travel patterns and the immediate impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on transit riders. We investigate three questions. First, how do transit riders differ socio-demographically from non-riders? Second, how has the travel behavior of transit riders changed due to the pandemic in comparison to nonriders, controlling for other factors? And third, how has this travel behavior varied across different types of transit riders? The travel patterns of transit riders were more significantly disrupted by the pandemic than the travel of nonriders, as measured by the average weekly number of trips and distance traveled before and after the onset of the pandemic. This was calculated using GPS traces from panel member smartphones. Our survey of the panel revealed that of transit riders, 75% reported taking transit less since the pandemic, likely due to a combination of being affected by transit service changes, concerns about infection risk on transit, and trip reductions due to shelter-in-place rules. Less than 10 percent of transit riders in our sample reported that they were comfortable using transit despite COVID-19 infection risk, and were not affected by transit service reductions. Transit riders were also more likely to have changed their travel behavior in other ways, including reporting an increase in walking. However, lower-income transit riders were different from higher-income riders in that they had a significantly smaller reduction in the number of trips and distance traveled, suggesting that these lower-income households had less discretion over the amount of travel they carried out during the pandemic. These results have significant implications for understanding the way welfare has been affected for transportationdisadvantaged populations during the course of the pandemic, and insight into the recovery of U.S. transit systems. The evidence from this unique dataset helps us understand the future effects of the pandemic on transit riders in the United States, either in further recovery from the pandemic with the anticipated effects of mass vaccination, or in response to additional waves of COVID-19 and other pandemics.
机译:Covid-19在世界范围内掀起了繁体,扰乱了通勤模式,模式选择和公共交通系统。在美国,由于Covid-19由于Covid-19导致的乘客卷减少的变更持续超过最初预期的时间。在本文中,我们研究了Covid-19大流行对在美国各个旅行行为的影响。我们将Jayurarary从由私营公司,Ammee Mobile策划的全国范围的基于智能手机的小组绘制的样本中分析到12月20日的移动数据。我们将这一点与我们在8月2020年8月向该样本进行了调查。我们的分析提供了进入旅行模式的洞察力,以及Covid-19大流行对运输车手的直接影响。我们调查了三个问题。首先,过境车手如何从非骑手身上的社会人口统计地差异?其次,与无林夫相比,过流行者的过境车手的旅行行为如何变化,控制其他因素?第三,这种旅行行为如何在不同类型的过境车手中变化?在大流行前和大流行前后行驶的平均每周旅行和距离的平均每周次数测量,过流行者的旅行骑手的旅行模式比无林的旅行更严重。这是使用来自面板成员智能手机的GPS痕迹计算的。我们对小组的调查显示过境骑手,75%报告报告自大流行以来越来越多的交通,可能是由于过境服务变化影响的组合,对途中的感染风险以及由于庇护所因避难而减少的疑虑放置规则。我们的样本中不到10%的过境车手报告说,尽管Covid-19感染风险,但仍然使用过境舒适,并且不受过境服务减少的影响。过境车手也更有可能以其他方式改变旅行行为,包括报告行走的增加。然而,低收入的运输车手与高收入车手不同,因为他们的旅行数量和距离数量明显较小,这表明这些低收入家庭在他们在期间进行的旅行量均不那么自行决定大流行。这些结果对理解福利在流行过程中受到影响的方式受到重大影响,以及洞察美国过境系统的复苏。来自这一独特数据集的证据有助于我们了解大流行对在美国的过境车手的未来影响,无论是从大流行都与大众疫苗接种的预期影响,还是应对额外的Covid-19和其他波浪的影响Pandemics。

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