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Dive into the research topics where Juliet Jain is active.

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Featured researches published by Juliet Jain.


Mobilities | 2013

Comparing Rail Passengers’ Travel Time Use in Great Britain Between 2004 and 2010

Glenn Lyons; Juliet Jain; Yusak O. Susilo; Stephen Atkins

ABSTRACT This paper provides a unique insight into aspects of stability and change regarding the travel time use of rail passengers in Great Britain between 2004 and 2010. Empirical evidence is presented on how rail passengers spend their time, how worthwhile they consider their time use to be, the extent of advance planning of their time use and how equipped for time use they are in terms of the items they have to hand when they travel. The results reveal a consistent dominance of reading for leisure, window gazing/people watching and working/studying as favoured travel time activities. Over the six-year period, the availability and use of mobile technologies has increased. Listening to music in particular has doubled in its incidence suggesting an increasing capacity for travellers to personalise the public space of the railway carriage. Most notably the analysis reveals a substantial increase in the proportion of travellers overall making very worthwhile use of their time.


Transportation Research Record | 2012

Rail passengers’ time use and utility assessment: 2010 findings from Great Britain with multivariate analysis

Yusak O. Susilo; Glenn Lyons; Juliet Jain; Steve Atkins

This paper uses data from Great Britains National Passenger Survey 2010 to examine the travel time use of rail passengers and their indicative assessment of the utility of that time use. The paper explores the impacts of individuals’ sociodemographic characteristics, the activities undertaken, and the perceived difficulties that may be faced by the travelers on their assessment of travel time use utility. The study showed that only 13% of travelers considered their travel time to be wasted time. However, this result varied by journey purpose, traveling class (first or standard class), gender, and journey length. The study showed that the positive or negative appreciation by passengers of their journey time was a result not only of various combinations of onboard activity engagements, but also of the smoothness of the overall journey experience. The ability to work or study on the train most significantly increased individual appreciation of time use. However, a delay on an individuals train journey also had a major influence on the reduction of his or her perceived value of the travel time spent. Information and communication technology devices that enable travelers to watch film or video, play games, or check e-mails were more appreciated than those devices that provide access to music, podcasts, or social networking sites. The paper joins others in questioning the assumptions made in economic appraisals that travel time is unproductive. The paper concludes with a call for more substantive and targeted data collection efforts within travel behavior research devoted to further unraveling the phenomenon of the positive utility of travel.


Transportation Research Record | 2012

Conceptual Model to Explain Turning Points in Travel Behavior: Application to Bicycle Use

Kiron Chatterjee; Henrietta Sherwin; Juliet Jain; Jo Christensen; Steven Marsh

Existing knowledge on cycling behavior, as with travel behavior in general, is based mainly on cross-sectional studies. It is questionable how much can be learned about the reasons for behavioral change from such studies. A major investment program to promote cycling in 12 English cities and towns between 2008 and 2011 provided the opportunity to study the bicycle use of residents and how that use was affected by the investment. Face-to-face interviews collected biographical information on travel behavior and life-change events during the investment period for 144 research participants and probed the reasons for changes in bicycle use. Theory (from the life course perspective) and preliminary analysis of the interview data were used to develop a conceptual model that hypothesized that turning points in travel behavior were triggered by contextual change (a life-change event or change in the external environment) and mediated by intrinsic motivations, facilitating conditions, and personal history. The model provided an effective means of explaining turning points in bicycle use. The analysis of the interview data showed how the nature of behavioral influences (in particular, life-change events and intrinsic motivations) varied over the life course. The research highlights the advantages of viewing travel behavior change in the context of peoples evolving lives and how that approach can help in developing transport policies and practices.


Mobilities | 2011

Grounded: Impacts of and Insights from the Volcanic Ash Cloud Disruption

Jo W Guiver; Juliet Jain

Abstract This paper presents the preliminary findings of a survey of over 500 people whose travel was affected. Stranded passengers used various support networks and means of contact. While travel providers were most likely to be able to help, they were less contactable and willing to help than family, friends and employers causing the impacts to ripple through ‘home’ networks. The findings demonstrate how flying maintains dispersed networks but has ‘created distance’ by raising expectations and eroding other travel services. The disruption illustrated the vulnerability of systems of aviation, their importance to many people’s lives and the challenge to improving sustainability.


Mobilities | 2017

An ideal journey: making bus travel desirable

W. Clayton; Juliet Jain; G. Parkhurst

Abstract This paper explores the ways in which people use their travel-time on local buses, and explains how this knowledge can assist with efforts in many ‘auto-centric’ societies to make bus travel more attractive and encourage a shift away from excessive private car use. Framing the discussion around the concept of an ‘ideal bus journey’, this paper examines whether travel-time activities on-board the bus give subjective value to the journey experience. Particular attention is given to emergent mobile Information and Communications Technologies, which are rapidly reconfiguring the ways in which we can inhabit and use mobile spaces such as the bus. This paper reports a novel mixed-methodology, creating a synthesised analysis of online discussions, focus groups, and a large-scale questionnaire survey of 840 bus users in Bristol, UK. The findings demonstrate that the bus is a very active space, with high levels of travel-time activity. The most popular activities on the bus are those related to relaxation and personal benefit, such as reading, listening to music, and browsing the internet. It is the passengers themselves that are largely in control of their in-vehicle experience, being able to craft a range of different positive journey experiences through travel-time activity. However, negative experiences are very common, and there is a need to challenge unfavourable public perception and media representations of bus travel to create a more positive cultural construction of the bus which would allow for the concept of an ‘ideal journey’ to be more easily realised. Passengers are the main creators of their travel-time experience, however there is much that can be done by bus operators to facilitate different types of activity and encourage a desirable public space. The overarching message is that there is a distinct opportunity to unlock travel-time activity as a ‘Unique Selling Point’ of the bus. Creating a perception of the bus journey as a desirable piece of time will allow local bus services to compete with the car on their own terms, and assist with international efforts to encourage people out of their cars and onto public transport for some trips.


Mobilities | 2018

The ‘digital glimpse’ as imagining home

W. Clayton; Juliet Jain; Adele Ladkin; Marina Marouda

Abstract This paper proposes the concept of the ‘digital glimpse’, which develops the existing framing of imaginative travel. Here it articulates the experiences of mobile workers digitally connecting into family life and everyday rituals when physically absent with work. The recent embedding of digital communication technologies into personal relationships and family life is reconfiguring how absence is experienced and practiced by workers on the move, and through this, new digital paradigms for life on-the-move are emerging. This paper explores how such social relationships are maintained at-a-distance through digital technology – using evidence from qualitative interviews with mobile workers and their families. Digital technology now enables expressive forms of ‘virtual travel’, including video calling, picture sharing, and instant messaging. This has implications for the ways in which families can manage the social and relational pressures of being apart. Experiences of imaginative travel created through novel media can enrich the experience and give a greater sense of connection for both those who are at home and those who are away. While technology is limited in its ability to replicate a sense of co-presence, ‘digital glimpses’ are an emergent set of sociotechnical practices that can reduce the negative impact of absence on family relationships.


Journal of Transport Geography | 2008

The gift of travel time

Juliet Jain; Glenn Lyons


Transportation Research Part A-policy and Practice | 2007

The Use of Travel Time by Rail Passengers in Great Britain

Glenn Lyons; Juliet Jain; David Holley


Journal of Transport Geography | 2011

The role of ICTs in everyday mobile lives

Tilly Line; Juliet Jain; Glenn Lyons


Journal of Transport Geography | 2013

Triggers for changes in cycling: the role of life events and modifications to the external environment

Kiron Chatterjee; Henrietta Sherwin; Juliet Jain

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Glenn Lyons

University of the West of England

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W. Clayton

University of the West of England

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Henrietta Sherwin

University of the West of England

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Kiron Chatterjee

University of the West of England

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Yusak O. Susilo

Royal Institute of Technology

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Steve Atkins

University of the West of England

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G. Parkhurst

University of the West of England

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