| Literature DB >> 28822881 |
Chengcheng Xu1, Haojie Li2, Jingya Zhao3, Jun Chen4, Wei Wang5.
Abstract
This study aimed to investigate the effects of jobs-housing balance on traffic safety. The crash, demographic characteristics, employment, road network, household characteristics and traffic data were collected from the Los Angeles in 2010. One-way ANOVA tests indicated that the jobs-housing ratio significantly affects traffic safety in terms of crash frequency at traffic analysis zone (TAZ). To quantify the safety impacts of jobs-housing balance, the semi-parametric geographically weighted Poisson regression (S-GWPR) was further used to link crash frequency at TAZ with jobs-housing ratio and other contributing factors. The S-GWPR provides better fitness to the data than do the generalized linear regression, as the S-GWPR accounts for the spatial heterogeneity. The S-GWPR results showed that the jobs-housing relationship has a significant association with crash frequency at TAZ when the factors of traffic, network, and household characteristics are controlled. Crash frequency at TAZ level increases with an increase in the jobs-housing ratio. To further investigate the interactive effects between jobs-housing ratio and other factors, a comparative analysis was conducted to compare the variable elasticities under different jobs-housing ratios. The results indicate considerable interactive effects that traffic conditions and road network characteristics have different effects on crash frequency under various jobs-housing ratios.Keywords: Jobs-housing balance; One-way ANOVA tests; Semi-parametric geographically weighted regression; Traffic analysis zone; Traffic safety
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28822881 DOI: 10.1016/j.aap.2017.08.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Accid Anal Prev ISSN: 0001-4575