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Journal Article

Citation

Ledesma RD, Tosi JD, Jakovcevic A, Poo FM. Adv. Transp. Stud. 2019; 47: 89-100.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Arcane Publishers)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Cycling is a healthy mode of transportation that also reduces car use and its associated environmental impact. The present study seeks to examine attitudes toward bicycles (versus cars) from a dual-process perspective. Implicit and explicit attitudes were evaluated in a sample of people who commute to university on bicycle, by car or via public transportation. Explicit attitudes were assessed using traditional self-reporting methods, while implicit attitudes were measured using a computer-based reaction time task (the Implicit Association Test). A total of 160 participants completed both measures in counterbalanced order.

RESULTS indicate that: (a) implicit and explicit attitudes are moderately and positively correlated; (b) both types of attitudes are associated with travel behavior, and (c) explicit attitudes are more consistently associated with behavioral intention and explicit preference for a transportation mode. The findings suggest that both types of attitude play a role in explaining cycling behavior, and that the understanding of this travel behavior would benefit from dual-process approaches.

Keywords: active transport; cycling behavior; attitudes; implicit attitude


Language: en

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