Publication | Closed Access
Objective Versus Perceived Walking Distances to Destinations
157
Citations
26
References
2007
Year
Built EnvironmentEnvironmentBehavioral SciencesPhysical ActivityDestination MarketingKinesiologyPerceived DistanceActivity-travel PatternEnvironmental BehaviorTourismMultimodal Travel BehaviorTravel BehaviorHuman MovementPublic HealthPhysical EnvironmentPerceived Environmental AttributesPhysical Activity BehaviorHealth Sciences
Judgments concerning features of environments do not always correspond accurately with objective measures of those same features. Moreover, perceived and objectively assessed environmental attributes, including proximity of destinations, may influence walking behavior in different ways. This study compares perceived and objectively assessed distance to several different destinations and examines whether correspondence between objective and perceived distance is influenced by age, gender, neighborhood walkability, and walking behavior. Distances to most destinations close to home are overestimated, whereas distances to those farther away are underestimated. Perceived and objective distances to certain types of destinations are differentially associated with walking behavior. Perceived environmental attributes do not consistently reflect objectively assessed attributes, and both appear to have differential effects on physical activity behavior.
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