Publication

Happiness and travel behavior modification

Michel Bierlaire
2008
Article de conférence
Résumé

We develop and test a new approach for measuring travel well-being that accounts for the routine nature of travel. We postulate that when people are in a routine, they dont fully consider their travel happiness. Only when people evaluate their options and reconsider their decisions will they think of their travel happiness. Consequently, a travel happiness measure collected at the time of decision-making might be a more relevant measure of their happiness that correlates better with behavior. To test this hypothesis, an experiment was conducted at three employment centers in Switzerland requiring habitual car drivers to switch temporarily to public transportation for their commute to work. The idea is that after the public transportation trial, the participants would think of their happiness as they reconsider their mode choice decisions. Participants travel happiness, perceptions, attitudes, and mode choice were measured before and after the intervention. Two main findings emerged from the analysis: first, the measures of happiness with the commute by car collected before and after the public transportation trial were significantly different, with generally a greater happiness with car reported after the experiment. Using the happiness measures as additional indicators of utility, a greater correlation was found between utility and the after measure, which supports the hypothesis that the measure of travel happiness collected when people evaluate their options is a more relevant measure for situations involving decision-making than that collected when people are in a routine. The implications for the measurement of well-being could apply to other domains involving routine behavior. Second, a number of participants continued to commute by public transportation after the required trial, which suggests that a temporary change in behavior might be effective in inducing behavioral modification or at least in affecting peoples choice sets. This has policy implications for public transportation agencies or institutions that are trying to encourage car drivers to shift to public transportation.

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Concepts associés (34)
Analyse appliquée du comportement
L'analyse du comportement appliquée, siglée ABA, en anglais Applied Behavior Analysis, se définit comme la science dans laquelle les techniques dérivées du béhaviorisme sont appliquées systématiquement afin d'améliorer des comportements socialement significatifs, et dans laquelle l'expérimentation est utilisée pour identifier les variables explicatives du comportement. L'analyse appliquée du comportement a remplacé la modification du comportement » (behavior modification) car cette dernière approche tentait de changer le comportement sans clarifier les interactions sous-jacentes avec l'environnement.
Bonheur
vignette|La société de consommation et la publicité qui en est le vecteur ont probablement conduit progressivement à une confusion entre les notions de plaisir et de bonheur, une idée véhiculée étant que le bonheur consisterait à assouvir l'ensemble des plaisirs proposés par l'économie de marché.Vue d'un fast food à Djakarta. vignette|Le judaisme associe le bonheur à l'idée de paradis perdu, depuis qu'Adam et Ève en ont été chassés pour avoir désobéi à Dieu.Le Paradis, peinture de Jérôme Bosch (vers 1500).
Économie du bonheur
L’économie du bonheur est une branche émergente de l'économie. Elle se distingue de l'économie du bien-être en ce qu'elle ne fonde pas ses analyses sur des considérations objectives et générales (la santé, l'éducation, l'environnement, etc) mais sur ce que l'on appelle communément le bonheur ; plus précisément sur des témoignages d'ordre subjectif, recueillis lors d'enquêtes associant psychologie et sociologie, au cours desquelles chacun indique comment s'établissent par exemple ses liens avec sa famille, ses relations au travail, son rapport à l'argent, l'importance que l'on donne à ce qui est utile, nécessaire, et ce qui ne l'est pas.
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