Kelly Draper Zuniga
Queensland University of Technology
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Featured researches published by Kelly Draper Zuniga.
Transportation Research Record | 2011
Kelly Draper Zuniga
This paper investigates a strategy for guiding school-based active travel intervention. School-based active travel programs address the travel behaviors and perceptions of small target populations (i.e., at individual schools) so they can encourage people to walk or bike. Thus, planners need to know as much as possible about the behaviors and perceptions of their target populations. However, existing strategies for modeling travel behavior and segmenting audiences typically work with larger populations and may not capture the attitudinal diversity of smaller groups. This case study used Q technique to identify salient travel-related attitude types among parents at an elementary school in Denver, Colorado; 161 parents presented their perspectives about school travel by rank-ordering 36 statements from strongly disagree to strongly agree in a normalized distribution, single centered around no opinion. Thirty-nine respondents’ cases were selected for case-wise cluster analysis in SPSS according to criteria that made them most likely to walk: proximity to school, grade, and bus service. Analysis revealed five core perspectives that were then correlated with the larger respondent pool: optimistic walkers, fair-weather walkers, drivers of necessity, determined drivers, and fence sitters. Core perspectives are presented–characterized by parents’ opinions, personal characteristics, and reported travel behaviors–and recommendations are made for possible intervention approaches. The study concludes that Q technique provides a fine-grained assessment of travel behavior for small populations, which would benefit small-scale behavioral interventions.
Transportation Research Record | 2013
Kelly Draper Zuniga; Jonathan M. Bunker; Kaveh Bevrani
This project advances the current understanding of intraurban rail passengers and their travel experiences to help rail industry leaders tailor policy approaches to fit specific, relevant segments of their target population. Using a Q-sorting technique and cluster analysis, preliminary research identified five perspectives occurring in a small sample of rail passengers who varied in their frequency and location of rail travel as well as certain sociodemographic characteristics. Revealed perspectives (named to capture the gist of their content) included “Rail travel is about the destination, not the journey”; “Despite challenges, public transport is still the best option”; “Rail travel is fine”; “Rail travel? So far, so good”; and “Bad taste for rail travel.” This paper discusses each of the perspectives in detail and considers them in relation to tailored policy implications. An overarching finding from this study is that improving railway travel access requires attention to physical, psychological, financial, and social facets of accessibility. For example, designing waiting areas to be more socially functional and comfortable has the potential to increase ridership by addressing social forms of access, decreasing perceived wait times, and making time at the station feel like time well spent. Even at this preliminary stage, the Q-sorting technique promises to provide a valuable, holistic, albeit fine-grained, analysis of passenger attitudes and experiences that will assist industry efforts in increasing ridership.
Oxford Bibliographies Online Datasets | 2012
Louise Chawla; Debra Flanders Cushing; Laura Malinin; Illène Pevec; Willem van Vliet; Kelly Draper Zuniga
Children and the environment cover a broad, interdisciplinary field of research and practice. The social sciences often use the word “environment” to mean the social, political, or economic context of children’s lives, but this bibliography covers physical settings. It focuses on a place-based scale that children can see, hear, taste, smell, touch, and navigate: not large, abstract scales such as national identities or population dynamics, or small scales such as environmental impacts on genes or cell functions. Attention to the everyday settings of children’s lives grew in the 18th century, when Romantic literature introduced the theme of children and nature. In the 19th century, concern for children’s welfare included an interest in conditions for children in burgeoning industrial cities, and justifications for early streetcar and railroad suburbs included claims that they would save children from the dangers of cities and provide the healthful benefits of natural surroundings. In the 20th century, academic disciplines developed different lines of inquiry about the impact of the physical environment on children and how children relate to places: ethnographic studies of children in different parts of the world in the fields of anthropology and geography; sociological studies of different populations of children in different settings; educational research on the learning opportunities that different school and out-of-school settings afford; medical research to understand disease vectors and the impact of pollutants on children; and efforts in the field of environment and behavior research more broadly, to understand how built and designed environments affect children physically, cognitively, socially, and emotionally. At the beginning of the 21st century, children and the environment is an active area of inquiry seeking to understand rapidly changing conditions for children as the world urbanizes, opportunities for free play outdoors and independent mobility erode in many parts of the world, media environments consume more of children’s time, and awareness grows that children need opportunities to contribute to creating sustainable societies.
Transport Policy | 2012
Kelly Draper Zuniga
Journal of transport and health | 2016
Kristiann C. Heesch; Bruce James; Tracy L. Washington; Kelly Draper Zuniga; Matthew Ian Burke
Faculty of Built Environment and Engineering; Science & Engineering Faculty | 2013
Kelly Draper Zuniga; Jonathan M. Bunker; Kaveh Bevrani
transport research forum | 2013
Kelly Draper Zuniga; Yulin Liu; Jonathan M. Bunker
transport research forum | 2013
Kelly Draper Zuniga; Christian Baird; Scott Burgess; Renee Clark; Samuel Heckel; Hannah Stanley; Chiara Towler; Kathleen Webster
transport research forum | 2013
Kelly Draper Zuniga; Kaveh Bevrani; Jonathan M. Bunker
Science & Engineering Faculty | 2013
Kelly Draper Zuniga; Kaveh Bevrani; Jonathan M. Bunker