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Stereotypes and the public acceptability of shared micromobility

An, Zihao ; Mullen, Caroline ; Zhao, Chunli LU and Heinen, Eva (2023) In Travel Behaviour and Society 33.
Abstract

Understanding the public's views and acceptability of shared micromobility (SMM) is crucial for uncovering barriers to incorporating SMM into sustainable urban mobility. This research studies stereotypes of SMM and their impacts on SMM's public acceptability. We focus on shared e-scooters and shared bikes/e-bikes in England, the Netherlands, and Sweden. We conceptualise stereotypes of SMM, developing a scale for their measurement. Factor analysis reveals that stereotypes of SMM are structured around two cognitive dimensions, namely, warmth and competence, which aligns with the stereotype content model. Warmth captures individuals' stereotyped SMM user images regarding how the users interact with other road users; competence reflects... (More)

Understanding the public's views and acceptability of shared micromobility (SMM) is crucial for uncovering barriers to incorporating SMM into sustainable urban mobility. This research studies stereotypes of SMM and their impacts on SMM's public acceptability. We focus on shared e-scooters and shared bikes/e-bikes in England, the Netherlands, and Sweden. We conceptualise stereotypes of SMM, developing a scale for their measurement. Factor analysis reveals that stereotypes of SMM are structured around two cognitive dimensions, namely, warmth and competence, which aligns with the stereotype content model. Warmth captures individuals' stereotyped SMM user images regarding how the users interact with other road users; competence reflects individuals' stereotyped SMM's capabilities to improve existing transport systems. Overall, stereotypes of SMM, characterised by low levels of warmth and high levels of competence, are ambivalent. Yet, they are also variable. Analysis of covariance unveils variations in SMM stereotypes across countries, sociodemographics, and travel patterns. Swedish residents, older adults, individuals from households without children, SMM users, and car-oriented individuals hold lower levels of warmth (for both types of SMM) and competence (for shared e-scooters) than their counterparts. Finally, the public acceptability of shared e-scooters is neutral, whilst that of shared bikes/e-bikes is mildly positive. Multivariate analyses show that stereotypes' warmth and competence are positively associated with individuals' acceptability of SMM, cumulatively accounting for over 50% of the variation in acceptability. Our findings help inform policies and planning on SMM. The developed scale holds the potential for evaluating stereotypes of SMM in particular and emerging transport services in general.

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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Acceptability, Shared bike, Shared e-scooter, Shared micromobility, Stereotype, Stereotype content model
in
Travel Behaviour and Society
volume
33
article number
100643
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85169929522
ISSN
2214-367X
DOI
10.1016/j.tbs.2023.100643
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
ae75ad4e-5a47-4759-86fc-620a8a589203
date added to LUP
2023-10-24 11:37:25
date last changed
2023-10-24 11:37:25
@article{ae75ad4e-5a47-4759-86fc-620a8a589203,
  abstract     = {{<p>Understanding the public's views and acceptability of shared micromobility (SMM) is crucial for uncovering barriers to incorporating SMM into sustainable urban mobility. This research studies stereotypes of SMM and their impacts on SMM's public acceptability. We focus on shared e-scooters and shared bikes/e-bikes in England, the Netherlands, and Sweden. We conceptualise stereotypes of SMM, developing a scale for their measurement. Factor analysis reveals that stereotypes of SMM are structured around two cognitive dimensions, namely, warmth and competence, which aligns with the stereotype content model. Warmth captures individuals' stereotyped SMM user images regarding how the users interact with other road users; competence reflects individuals' stereotyped SMM's capabilities to improve existing transport systems. Overall, stereotypes of SMM, characterised by low levels of warmth and high levels of competence, are ambivalent. Yet, they are also variable. Analysis of covariance unveils variations in SMM stereotypes across countries, sociodemographics, and travel patterns. Swedish residents, older adults, individuals from households without children, SMM users, and car-oriented individuals hold lower levels of warmth (for both types of SMM) and competence (for shared e-scooters) than their counterparts. Finally, the public acceptability of shared e-scooters is neutral, whilst that of shared bikes/e-bikes is mildly positive. Multivariate analyses show that stereotypes' warmth and competence are positively associated with individuals' acceptability of SMM, cumulatively accounting for over 50% of the variation in acceptability. Our findings help inform policies and planning on SMM. The developed scale holds the potential for evaluating stereotypes of SMM in particular and emerging transport services in general.</p>}},
  author       = {{An, Zihao and Mullen, Caroline and Zhao, Chunli and Heinen, Eva}},
  issn         = {{2214-367X}},
  keywords     = {{Acceptability; Shared bike; Shared e-scooter; Shared micromobility; Stereotype; Stereotype content model}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Travel Behaviour and Society}},
  title        = {{Stereotypes and the public acceptability of shared micromobility}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tbs.2023.100643}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.tbs.2023.100643}},
  volume       = {{33}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}