论文标题

骑行需求的互动差异:伊利诺伊州芝加哥的邻里影响的多层次分析

Disparities in ridesourcing demand for mobility resilience: A multilevel analysis of neighborhood effects in Chicago, Illinois

论文作者

Borowski, Elisa, Soria, Jason, Schofer, Joseph, Stathopoulos, Amanda

论文摘要

出行弹性是指个人在运输系统计划外的中断,即完成所需的旅行的能力。新的按需移动选择(例如骑车服务)填补不可预测的移动空白的潜力是适应能力的不断增长的来源。将自然实验方法应用于新释放的骑乘数据数据,我们通过分析在芝加哥芝加哥的种族和经济多元化城市中跨越意外的铁路运输服务中断期间的乘车使用变化,从而检查了对运输系统的突然冲击过程中对运输系统突然冲击的差距填充作用的差异。使用多级混合模型,我们不仅控制着破坏发生的直接站属性,还控制着三层结构中社区区域和城市象限的更广泛背景。因此,除了控制车站级别的效果外,社区之间未观察到的变异性可能与居民的过境乘客或社会经济地位等因素的差异有关。我们的发现表明,个人在铁路运输中断期间使用骑车作为填充机制,但是在情况和位置环境之间存在巨大的差异。具体而言,我们的结果表明,在工作日,非霍顿和更严重的干扰以及在白人居民和过境通勤者中的百分比更高的社区地区以及在城市北边更富裕的北边,在工作日,非霍顿和更严重的中断的响应迅速响应响应式响应响应式响应量增加。这些发现指出了新见解,具有深远的影响,对骑行方式如何通过在中断过程中提供增加的能力来补充现有运输网络,但似乎并没有为通常具有更多有限的流动性选项的低收入有色人种带来公平的差距填补益处。

Mobility resilience refers to the ability of individuals to complete their desired travel despite unplanned disruptions to the transportation system. The potential of new on-demand mobility options, such as ridesourcing services, to fill unpredicted gaps in mobility is an underexplored source of adaptive capacity. Applying a natural experiment approach to newly released ridesourcing data, we examine variation in the gap-filling role of on-demand mobility during sudden shocks to a transportation system by analyzing the change in use of ridesourcing during unexpected rail transit service disruptions across the racially and economically diverse city of Chicago. Using a multilevel mixed model, we control not only for the immediate station attributes where the disruption occurs, but also for the broader context of the community area and city quadrant in a three-level structure. Thereby the unobserved variability across neighborhoods can be associated with differences in factors such as transit ridership, or socio-economic status of residents, in addition to controlling for station level effects. Our findings reveal that individuals use ridesourcing as a gap-filling mechanism during rail transit disruptions, but there is strong variation across situational and locational contexts. Specifically, our results show larger increases in transit disruption responsive ridesourcing during weekdays, nonholidays, and more severe disruptions, as well as in community areas that have higher percentages of White residents and transit commuters, and on the more affluent northside of the city. These findings point to new insights with far-reaching implications on how ridesourcing complements existing transport networks by providing added capacity during disruptions but does not appear to bring equitable gap-filling benefits to low-income communities of color that typically have more limited mobility options.

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