Residential Location Econometric Choice Modeling With Irregular Zoning: Common Border Spatial Correlation Metric
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Residential Location Econometric Choice Modeling With Irregular Zoning: Common Border Spatial Correlation MetricAuthor(s)
Date
2020Citation
Pérez-López, JB., Novales, M., Varela-García, FA. et al. Residential Location Econometric Choice Modeling with Irregular Zoning: Common Border Spatial Correlation Metric. Netw Spat Econ 20, 785–802 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11067-020-09495-5
Abstract
[Abstract] Residential location choice (RLC) predicts where and how people choose their residential location in the framework of land use–transport interaction models (LUTI). This paper seeks an efficient RLC model in the context of irregular zoning of location alternatives. The main current proposals in the field are discrete choice models. In RLC modeling, the alternatives are spatial units, and spatially correlated logit (SCL) is an efficient approach when the analyst cannot pre-define groups of alternatives that efficiently reflect the systematic substitution patterns among the alternatives. The SCL uses the spatial information on the contiguity of the zones to determine spatial correlation among the alternatives. Urban residential location choice usually uses administrative zoning, which is very irregular in many cities (mainly historic cities); however, SCL is not efficient in this context owing to the limitations of the binary contiguity spatial variable employed as a spatial correlation metric (SCM). This paper proposes an extension of the mixed SCL model, with an SCM based on the proportion of common border length in contiguous zones, which is more efficient in the irregular urban zoning context. The proposed model is applied to an urban case study of LUTI RLC modeling with irregular zoning, based on the administrative divisions of the city of Santander (Spain) and is shown to be empirically more efficient than the previous approaches.
Keywords
Mixed GEV models
Spatial correlation
Econometric choice modeling
Residential location choice modeling
Land use-transport interaction models
Behavioral demand modeling
Spatial correlation
Econometric choice modeling
Residential location choice modeling
Land use-transport interaction models
Behavioral demand modeling
Editor version
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This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in Networks and Spatial Economics (2020) 20:785–802. The final authenticated version is available online at https://doi.org/10.1007/s11067-020-09495-5
ISSN
1572-9427
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