Gender differences in walking behavior, attitudes about walking and perceptions of the environment in three Maryland communities.

Author(s)
Clifton, K.J. & Livi, A.D.
Year
Abstract

Pedestrian behaviors and attitudes toward walking have recently become a focus of interest for researchers in a number of disciplines, including public health, transportation planning, and recreational studies. The potential gender differences regarding not only walking behavior but also attitudes about walking and perceptions of the environment, including safety, are of particular interest to planning researchers. To address these issues, the research design utilizes a survey instrument devised to capture respondents’ perceptions about the physical environment, attitudes about walking, and selfreported pedestrian behaviors. These data were collected in three Maryland communities with different walkability and socioeconomic characteristics as part of a study to understand connections between the built environment and walking. These data are analyzed to examine how the subjective measures contribute to the understanding of gender differences in revealed pedestrian behaviors, attitudes, and perceptions. Lessons learned from this project, potential contributions to the understanding of the walking environment for both sexes, and future avenues of research are discussed. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20200164 ST [electronic version only]
Source

In: Research on Women's Issues in Transportation : proceedings of the TRB Conference, Chicago, Illinois, November 18-20, 2004, Volume 2 : Technical Papers, p. 79-88, ref.; Conference Proceedings CP ; No. 35 - ISSN 1073-1652 / ISBN 0-309-09394-5

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.