Michigan Mobility Metrics (M3): An Outcome-Focused, Multi-Year Survey Deployment and Data Collection Effort

Transportation modes, technologies, and the broader context within which people travel have evolved rapidly over the last decade. Examples of such changes include the introduction of: new/emerging modes like ridesharing and micromobility, electric and automated vehicle technologies, information and communication devices; and the increase in remote and hybrid work due to COVID-19. It is critical to understand how these changes will impact residents’ travel behaviors and choices into the future, particularly taking into account the diversity in land use and demographics across Michigan. The ongoing statewide household travel survey effort is critical in providing a current snapshot of travel patterns over 2024-2026. To provide an additional layer of context to this survey, the research team proposes a detailed research-oriented survey that can augment this data by providing an in-depth view of residents’ attitudes, preferences, behaviors, and intended adoption rates for new transport modes and technologies. Detailed survey data on residents’ attitudes, needs, and intended adoption of emerging/future mobility modes and services can drastically improve demand modeling, planning, and policy development processes across the state. Potential similarity in time frame with the ongoing household travel survey would also facilitate spatially and temporally aligned data integration across the datasets and providing a richer survey dataset than Michigan has ever had before for transportation planning purposes. This rich data can enable the estimation of demand forecasting parameters that make use of the most recent research in these fields, and is particularly opportune given the recent development and implementation of a new activity-based model for the Detroit metropolitan region (for which the Metropolitan Planning Organization is the Southeast Michigan Council of Governments: SEMCOG). Taken together, these developments may improve demand forecasts, evaluation, and policy development for the SEMCOG region, as well as for the state.

Language

  • English

Project

  • Status: Active
  • Funding: $300,000.00
  • Contract Numbers:

    69A3552344815

    69A3552348320

  • Sponsor Organizations:

    Office of the Assistant Secretary for Research and Technology

    University Transportation Centers Program
    Department of Transportation
    Washington, DC  United States  20590
  • Managing Organizations:

    Center for Understanding Future of Travel Behavior and Demand

    University of Texas
    Austin, TX  United States 
  • Project Managers:

    Bhat, Chandra

  • Performing Organizations:

    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

    Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
    2350 Hayward
    Ann Arbor, MI  United States  48109-2125
  • Principal Investigators:

    Shaw, Atiyya

  • Start Date: 20240601
  • Expected Completion Date: 20270531
  • Actual Completion Date: 0
  • USDOT Program: University Transportation Centers Program

Subject/Index Terms

Filing Info

  • Accession Number: 01954941
  • Record Type: Research project
  • Source Agency: Center for Understanding Future of Travel Behavior and Demand
  • Contract Numbers: 69A3552344815, 69A3552348320
  • Files: UTC, RIP
  • Created Date: May 13 2025 7:21PM