Daily travel behavior and emotional well-being: Effects of trip mode, duration, purpose, and companionship

Jing Zhu, Yingling Fan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

118 Scopus citations

Abstract

Positive emotions have long-lasting benefits for human development. Understanding the connections between daily travel behavior and emotional well-being will not only help transportation practitioners identify concrete strategies to improve user experiences of transportation services, but also help health practitioners to identify innovative solutions for improving public health. Prior research on the subject had focused on limited travel behavior dimensions such as travel mode and/or travel duration. Other dimensions such as travel purpose and travel companionship have received limited attention. Using data from the 2012–2013 American Time Use Survey, this paper applied the generalized ordered logistic regression approach and examined how the mode, duration, purpose, and companionship characteristics of a trip shape six different emotions during the trip, including happy, meaningful, tired, stressful, sad, and pain. After controlling for personal demographics, health conditions, and residential locations, we find that biking is the happiest mode; public transit is the least happy and least meaningful; and utilitarian walking for transportation is associated with all four negative emotions. Trip duration has a negative association with happiness and a positive association with stress. Travel for discretionary purposes such as leisure, exercise, and community activities is generally associated with higher levels of positive emotions and lower levels of negative emotions than travel for work or household maintenance. Trips with eating and drinking purposes appear to be the happiest and trips with the purpose of spiritual and/or volunteering activities appear to be the most meaningful. Travel with family especially children or travel with friends is happier and more meaningful than travel alone. Transportation planners in the U.S. are recommended to promote biking behavior, improve transit user experiences, and implement spatial planning strategies for creating a built environment conducive to shorter trips, more discretionary trips, and more joint trips with family and friends.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)360-373
Number of pages14
JournalTransportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice
Volume118
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2018

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
The authors thank the Editor and three anonymous reviewers for many helpful suggestions that greatly improved the paper. This research is supported by the National Science Foundation , United States (Award No. 1444745 ) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China , China (Grant No. 51608443 ).

Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd

Keywords

  • Affect
  • Emotion
  • Happiness
  • Satisfaction
  • Travel behavior
  • Well-being

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