YT
Y. Tao
11 records found
1
Linking residential mobility with daily mobility
A three-wave cross-lagged panel analysis of travel mode choices and preferences pre–post residential relocation in the Netherlands
The causal impact of the built environment on travel behaviours is a subject of debate. This debate especially concerns the independent effect of the built environment on the observed travel patterns after taking into account residential self-selection arising from pre-existing t
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Changes in commuting mode and the relationship with psychological stress
A quasi-longitudinal analysis in urbanizing China
Emerging longitudinal research on the relationship between commuting mode and psychological wellbeing draws exclusively from cities in developed countries and the findings are not consistent. Our study contributes to the evidence base from urban China, where rapid urban growth ha
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Residential self-selection studies argue that pre-existing travel-related attitude overshadows the role of changes in residential built environment in (re)shaping travel behaviours. Our study contributes to this self-selection argument by including family- and job-related life ev
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A household perspective on the commuting paradox
Longitudinal relationships between commuting time and subjective wellbeing for couples in China
Research on the experienced utility of commuting time is dominated by an individualistic view of choice concerning the trade-offs between long commutes and job- or housing-related benefits. The widely discussed phenomenon of the commuting paradox shows that individuals systematic
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Working from home and subjective wellbeing during the COVID-19 pandemic
The role of pre-COVID-19 commuting distance and mode choices
Working from home (WFH) was prevalent among previous daily commuters during the COVID-19 pandemic and is expected to continue in post-COVID-19 society. By using WFH enforced by the UK government during the pandemic as a real-world experiment, our study investigates the relationsh
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Commuting behaviour and subjective wellbeing
A longitudinal perspective
This thesis has investigated the relationship between daily commuting behaviours and long-term subjective wellbeing from a longitudinal perspective. The underlying problem that motivated the thesis is the inconsistent research evidence on the commuting-wellbeing relationship, and
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Associations between spatial access to medical facilities and health-seeking behaviors
A mixed geographically weighted regression analysis in Shanghai, China
Enhancing the spatial accessibility to medical facilities is an important public health strategy in many countries. However, it is not clear whether enhancing spatial accessibility is capable of addressing medical care issues due to the complexity of individuals' health-seeking b
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Commuting behaviours and subjective wellbeing
A critical review of longitudinal research
The relationship between commuting behaviours and subjective wellbeing has been fascinating scholars of different disciplines. Especially in the last decade, longitudinal research designs have made great progress in identifying causality in the commuting-wellbeing relationship by
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Neighborhood effects on health
A multilevel analysis of neighborhood environment, physical activity and public health in suburban Shanghai
With great concern over the health-promoting environment worldwide, there is a growing body of research into the neighborhood effects on health beyond the sole focus on individual socioeconomic disadvantages and lifestyle risks. Our study contributes to neighborhood health resear
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Mobility-based environmental justice
Understanding housing disparity in real-time exposure to air pollution and momentary psychological stress in Beijing, China
Environmental justice is a crucial environmental and social problem. Previous research in the cities of developed countries has found that ethnic minorities and low-income people were disproportionately exposed to the residential environment with more serious environmental risks.
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Associations of co-exposures to air pollution and noise with psychological stress in space and time
A case study in Beijing, China
Air pollution and noise are both ubiquitous environmental stressors that pose great threats to public health. Emerging evidence has noticed the combined health risks caused by the coexistence of traffic-related air pollutants and noise in the residential context. However, less is
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