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Unit 2: Describing Transit Systems with Data. Data Collection With Surveys. Outline. Types of surveys Methods of sampling Survey content Survey instruments Data collection plan.
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Unit 2: Describing Transit Systems with Data Data Collection With Surveys
Outline • Types of surveys • Methods of sampling • Survey content • Survey instruments • Data collection plan
Last time we discussed the type of information we collect. Now, let’s discuss how we go about collected detailed survey data. Types of Surveys
Types of Surveys • Longitudinal survey • Over time • Cross-sectional survey • Single point in time
Survey Modes • On-board/Intercept • Telephone • Mail • Web-based • Smartphones (emerging)
On-Board & Intercept Surveys Overview Pros & Cons Easy to administer Inexpensive Relatively high response rates (33%-67%*) Constraint of trip time on length of survey instrument (mail-back option) Non-riders excluded • Conducted on-board vehicles, in stations or at stops • Target (study) population is current riders • Very common: 96% of transit agencies conducted on-board surveys between 2002-2004*
Telephone Survey Overview Pros & Cons Riders and non-riders Medium to long survey instruments Good response rates Interviewer training (Computer Aided Telephone Interviewing, or CATI, can help) Respondent needs a (local) telephone • Sampling frame is the household • Often use Random Digit Dialing (RDD) • Most common in cities with high use of transit • 71% of transit agencies conducted telephone surveys between 2002-2004*
Mail Survey Overview Pros & Cons Riders and non-riders Longer survey instruments Easy to administer Eliminates interviewer bias Response rates can be very low; typically below 20%* Usually not used for origin-destination surveys • Sampling frame is the household • Somewhat common • 38% of transit agencies conducted mail surveys*
Web Survey Overview Pros & Cons Very inexpensive Very easy to administer Longer survey instruments Eliminates interviewer bias Data already coded Respondent needs to have internet Difficult to achieve random sample • Sampling frame is riders (usually) • Increasingly common • 44% of transit agencies conducted mail surveys between 2002-2004*
Smartphone Survey Overview Pros & Cons Geocoded travel information Longer survey instruments Relatively easy to administer Data already coded Respondent needs to have a smartphone Difficult to achieve random sample Privacy concerns • Native smartphone applications can be used for travel surveys • Geocoded travel information supplemented with survey questions • Still in research & development • Some state DOTs; limited (if any) use in transit
Methods of Sampling • Simple Random Sampling • Systematic Sampling • every nth unit selected • Stratified Sampling • divide the population into homogenous groups (e.g. areas of the city) • Cluster Sampling • natural groups, sample within groups • Probability Proportionate to Size • selection probability proportional to size
Sample Size Determination • Depends on the population size (e.g. number of riders) and the level of precision desired • Increase sample size increase costs • Example for Simple Random Sampling
What is commonly included in transit surveys? Survey Content
Research Goals & Content • Origin & Destination Surveys • “This trip”: Origin, destination, purpose, access mode, egress mode, etc. • General Travel Behavior • Frequency of travel, how long using transit, alternative modes • Demographics • Gender, age, race, driver’s license, HH income, HH size, employment status • Satisfaction • Attributes of service: timely service, speed of service, cleanliness, comfort, safety, crowing, information • Other • Fare payment, new technologies, communications, etc.
How to write a good survey Survey Instrument
Types of Questions • Closed-Ended • Dichotomous (2 answers, e.g. Yes/No) • Nominal (Categorical) • Ordinal (a.k.a. Likert, Ranking) • Filter/Contingency (Qualified) • Partially-Closed • Last answer is “Other______” • Open-Ended
Do’s and Don’ts • Questions should be: • Concise (multiple choice) • Understandable • Useful • Exhaustive • Questions should NOT be: • Double-barreled • Double negative • Technical jargon • Long-winded • Redundant • Obtrusive or embarrassing
Now, its time for you to practice In-Class Exercise
Putting it all together in order to create a… Data Collection Plan
Creating a Data Collection Plan • Determine research goals • Select survey mode & sampling methodology • Determine necessary sample size • Create detailed sampling plan • Draft questionnaire • Pre-test the questionnaire • Conduct staff training • Distribute survey & revise sampling plan • Code/process data & error check
Other Considerations • Language • English & Spanish • Special groups • Those who cannot read/write • Longitudinal comparisons • Consistency of questions with prior transit surveys
What does a (good) transit survey look like? Chicago Transit Authority
2003 Chicago Transit AuthorityCustomer Satisfaction Survey • Objective: Comprehensive review of customer satisfaction conducted every 2 to 3 years • Content Included: • General travel behavior (modes, trip purpose) • Satisfaction with service delivery attributes • Loyalty towards CTA • Technology use (internet access, CTA website) • Fare payment • Demographics
CTA: Mode & Sampling • Mode: Household Telephone survey • Random Digit Dialing • Computer Assist • Stratified Sampling • Area of residence (N, S, NW, SW, W, Suburbs) • Mode (rail or bus) • Sample Size • Minimum of 200 respondents per strata • Total of 2,577 responses
CTA: Questionnaire • Question types • Mostly closed-ended questions (scales typically 5 points) • A few partially closed (other) & open ended questions • Interview length • Average of 21.4 minutes to complete • Pre-tested to assure length • Response rate • 64,986 telephone numbers attempted
CTA: Results • Satisfaction with bus service: • Has improved terms of reliability, information services, and comfort, among other things. • Has decreased in regards to access to service, personal safety, and intramodal transferring (within CTA). • Satisfaction with rail service: • Has improved or stay constant in terms of operator attributes (personnel), information sources, reliability and fare payment, among other things. • Has decreased in regards to access to service, intramodal travel, personal safety, and appearance.
Conclusion • Surveys are a good way for agencies to know who their riders are and what they want. • There are several survey types with varying costs, penetration and bias. They should be chosen to match their target. • Surveys should be easy to understand and should encourage participants to complete them.
Reference Materials in this lecture were taken from: • Schaller. “On-board and Intercept Transit Survey Techniques”. Transit Cooperative Research Program Synthesis 63, National Research Council, Washington, DC (2005). • CTA, Customer Satisfaction Survey, 2003.