Abstract

The amount of time we spend online has been increasing dramatically, influencing our daily travel and activity patterns. However, empirical studies on changes in the extent to which the amount of time spent online are related to changes in our activity and travel patterns are scarce, mainly due to a lack of available longitudinal or quasi-longitudinal data. This paper explores how the relationships between the time spent using the Internet, and the time spent on non-mandatory maintenance and leisure activities, have evolved over a decade. Maintenance activities include out-of-home activities such as shopping, banking, and doctor visits, while leisure activities include entertainment activities, visiting friends, sporting activities, and so forth. Our approach uses two datasets from two major cross-sectional surveys in Scotland, i.e. the 2005/06 Scottish Household Survey (SHS) and the 2015 Integrated Multimedia City Data (iMCD) Survey, which were similarly structured and formed. The multiple discrete–continuous extreme value (MDCEV) model and difference-in-differences (DD) estimation are applied and integrated to examine how the relationships between the time spent on the Internet and travel have changed over time and the direction and magnitude of the changes. Our findings suggest that the complementary associations between Internet use and individuals’ non-mandatory activity-travel time use are diminishing over time, whereas their substitutive associations are increasing. We additionally find that such temporal changes are significant in the case of those who spent moderate to high levels of time on the Internet (5 h or more online) per week.

Highlights

  • Since at least the 1970s, researchers have made extensive efforts to better understand different aspects of the complex relationships between the use of information and communications technologies (ICT) and individuals’ activity and travel behavior

  • This study empirically investigates the temporal changes in the relationships between the time spent on the Internet and activity-travel behavior in terms of non-mandatory activity purposes

  • In order to achieve alongitudinal analysis, this study overcomes data and information deficiency by using datasets from two major cross-sectional surveys implemented in Scotland, the 2005/06 Scottish Household Survey (SHS) and the 2015 Integrated Multimedia City Data (iMCD) Survey, which were designed and structured

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Summary

Introduction

Since at least the 1970s, researchers have made extensive efforts to better understand different aspects of the complex relationships between the use of information and communications technologies (ICT) and individuals’ activity and travel behavior. Transportation information age, such research efforts are facing new challenges due to the ubiquity of modern technology and the multiple ways in which ICT use is increasingly deeply embedded into our daily lives (Reed 2014). Due to the rapidly changing technology landscape, we can expect changes in people’s use of ICT over time. Individuals are finding e-commerce easy to use and online transactions easier to make, and are becoming more dependent on them in their everyday lives. From a long-term perspective, this rapid evolution in technologies would bring about changes in people’s lifestyles and behavior over time, including in their mobility behavior (El Zarwi et al 2017)

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