| Literature DB >> 27881173 |
Mohammad Javad Koohsari1,2,3,4, Neville Owen5,6, Ester Cerin7, Billie Giles-Corti8, Takemi Sugiyama5,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Neighborhood walkability has been shown to be associated with walking behavior. However, the availability of geographical data necessary to construct it remains a limitation. Building on the concept of space syntax, we propose an alternative walkability index, space syntax walkability (SSW). This study examined associations of the full walkability index and SSW with walking for transport (WT).Entities:
Keywords: Built environment; Space syntax; Street layout; Urban design; Urban form; Walkability; Walking
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27881173 PMCID: PMC5122155 DOI: 10.1186/s12966-016-0448-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act ISSN: 1479-5868 Impact factor: 6.457
Fig. 1a A schematic diagram of a hypothetical neighborhood and b its axial lines (numbers represent segment names)
Fig. 2Justified graphs using node 5 (a) and node 6 (b) as the base node
Fig. 3Level of integration (thicker lines represent higher levels of integration)
Fig. 4Conceptual diagram showing how the concept of 3Ds are operationalized in full walkability and SSW
Characteristics of study participants (N = 2591)
| Variable | Mean (SD) or N (%) |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 44.4 (12.3) |
|
| 14 (0.5%) |
| Gender | |
|
| 1652 (63.8%) |
|
| 5 (0.2%) |
| Employed | |
|
| 1649 (63.6%) |
|
| 0 (0.0%) |
| Education | |
|
| 1192 (46.0%) |
|
| 0 (0.0%) |
| Children in household | |
|
| 794 (30.6%) |
|
| 0 (0.0%) |
| Marital status | |
|
| 1086 (41.9%) |
|
| 1432 (55.3%) |
|
| 73 (2.8%) |
|
| 0 (0.0%) |
| Household income (AUD$ per annum) | |
|
| 595 (23.0%) |
|
| 650 (25.1%) |
|
| 729 (28.1%) |
|
| 503 (19.4%) |
|
| 114 (4.4%) |
| Days of WT in the past week | 3.2 (2.5) |
Spearman’s correlation coefficients between walkability components and walkability indices
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Net residential density | 1 | 0.60** | −0.41** | 0.30** | 0.73** | 0.42** | 0.56** | 0.57** |
| 2. Intersection density | 1 | 0.01 | 0.49** | 0.61** | 0.60** | 0.87** | 0.68** | |
| 3. Land use mix | 1 | 0.26** | −0.28** | 0.12 | 0.27** | 0.00 | ||
| 4. Net retail area ratio | 1 | 0.36** | 0.67** | 0.78** | 0.64** | |||
| 5. Gross population density | 1 | 0.52** | 0.57** | 0.77** | ||||
| 6. Integration | 1 | 0.73** | 0.93** | |||||
| 7. Full walkability | 1 | 0.76** | ||||||
| 8. SSW | 1 |
**p < 0.01
Associations of density, street layout and walkability measures with WT frequency
| Model | Exposure | IRR (95% CI) | AIC | BIC |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Net residential density | 1.09 (1.05, 1.13)** | 4.614239 | −17967.44 |
| 2 | Gross population density | 1.12 (1.08, 1.16)** | 4.610708 | −17976.57 |
| 3 | Intersection density | 1.09 (1.05, 1.14)** | 4.613614 | −17969.06 |
| 4 | Integration | 1.12 (1.08,1.16)** | 4.609942 | −17978.55 |
| 5 | Full walkability | 1.12 (1.08, 1.17)** | 4.609867 | −17978.75 |
| 6 | SSW | 1.14 (1.10, 1.19)** | 4.607357 | −17985.24 |
All models accounted for clustering at the CCD level and adjusted for age, gender, education, marital status, children in household, income, employment status, and neighborhood SES. All exposure measures were standardized
IRR incidence rate ratio
AIC Akaike information criterion
BIC Bayesian information criterion
**p < 0.01