Abstract The COVID-19 pandemic has led to a globally unprecedented change in human mobility. Leveraging two-year bike-sharing trips from the largest bike-sharing program in Chicago, this study examines the spatiotemporal evolution of bike-sharing usage across the pandemic and compares it with other modes of transport. A set of generalized additive (mixed) models are fitted to identify relationships and delineate nonlinear temporal interactions between station-level daily bike-sharing usage and various independent variables including socio-demographics, land use, transportation features, station characteristics, and COVID-19 infections. Results show: 1) the proportion of commuting trips is substantially lower during the pandemic; 2) the trend of bike-sharing usage follows an “increase-decrease-rebound” pattern; 3) bike-sharing presents as a more resilient option compared with transit, driving, and walking; 4) regions with more white, Asian, and fewer African-American residents are found to become less dependent on bike-sharing; 5) open space and residential areas exhibit less decrease and earlier start-to-recover time; 6) stations near the city center, with more docks, or located in high-income areas go from more increase before the pandemic to more decrease during the pandemic. Findings provide a timely understanding of bike-sharing usage changes and offer suggestions on how different stakeholders should respond to this unprecedented crisis.


    Zugriff

    Zugriff prüfen

    Verfügbarkeit in meiner Bibliothek prüfen

    Bestellung bei Subito €


    Exportieren, teilen und zitieren



    Titel :

    Examining spatiotemporal changing patterns of bike-sharing usage during COVID-19 pandemic


    Beteiligte:
    Hu, Songhua (Autor:in) / Xiong, Chenfeng (Autor:in) / Liu, Zhanqin (Autor:in) / Zhang, Lei (Autor:in)


    Erscheinungsdatum :

    2021-02-15




    Medientyp :

    Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)


    Format :

    Elektronische Ressource


    Sprache :

    Englisch




    Examining usage patterns of a bike-sharing scheme in a medium sized city

    Caulfield, Brian / O'Mahony, Margaret / Brazil, William et al. | Elsevier | 2017


    Temporal Network Approach to Explore Bike Sharing Usage Patterns

    Tlebaldinova, Aizhan / Nugumanova, Aliya / Baiburin, Yerzhan et al. | TIBKAT | 2020