Identifying latent shared mobility preference segments in low-income communities: ride-hailing, fixed-route bus, and mobility-on-demand transit
Xinyi Wang, Xiang Yan, Xilei Zhao, Zhuoxuan Cao

TL;DR
This study identifies distinct latent segments among low-income communities regarding shared mobility preferences, revealing potential early adopters and barriers to equitable MOD transit service adoption.
Contribution
It introduces a latent class analysis of low-income residents' mobility preferences, highlighting segments and factors influencing MOD transit adoption.
Findings
Identified three mobility preference segments: enthusiast, opponent, and loyalist.
Enthusiasts are likely early adopters of MOD transit services.
Barriers include technological challenges faced by loyalists.
Abstract
Concepts of Mobility-on-Demand (MOD) and Mobility as a Service (MaaS), which feature the integration of various shared-use mobility options, have gained widespread popularity in recent years. While these concepts promise great benefits to travelers, their heavy reliance on technology raises equity concerns as socially disadvantaged population groups can be left out in an era of on-demand mobility. This paper investigates the potential uptake of MOD transit services (integrated fixed-route and on-demand services) among travelers living in low-income communities. Specially, we analyze people's latent attitude towards three shared-use mobility services, including ride-hailing services, fixed-route transit, and MOD transit. We conduct a latent class cluster analysis of 825 survey respondents sampled from low-income neighborhoods in Detroit and Ypsilanti, Michigan. We identified three latent…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsTransportation and Mobility Innovations · Urban Transport and Accessibility · Sharing Economy and Platforms
