Sample size requirements for measuring a change in behaviour.

Author(s)
Stopher, P.R. & Greaves, S.P.
Year
Abstract

Before and after surveys are designed to detect a change in travel-behaviour following an intervention policy, such as a travel-modification program. Longitudinal panel surveys are the preferred method for detecting such changes, because the variance of the difference between the before and after surveys is substantially reduced, enabling changes to be detected with smaller sample sizes than if a repeated cross-sectional survey is used. A key issue concerns the size of sample required to be able to generalise the panel results to the population. In this paper the authors present the rationale for an alternative formulation and demonstrate its applicability both hypothetically and then empirically using data from the Puget Sound Transportation Panel. The results have important ramifications both for those implementing future behaviour change programs and those interpreting the results reported in previous studies. (Author/publisher) For the covering entry of this conference, please see ITRD abstract no. E211825.

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Publication

Library number
C 34154 (In: C 34141 CD-ROM) /71 /72 / ITRD E211838
Source

In: ATRF 04: papers of the 27th Australasian Transport Research Forum, Volume 27, University of South Australia, Transport Systems Centre, 29 September-1 October 2004, 15 p., ref.

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