Need Directions? Might Not Want To Ask a Transit Rider
Daniel_Stuckey writes "According to new research, drivers, walkers, and bicyclists will generally provide us with more useful directions than transit riders. Published in Urban Planning, 'Going Mental' shows that cognitively active travelers, regardless of commute by foot or car, tend to trump cognitively passive travelers (those who frequent public buses and trains), in perceiving distance. Questioning cognitively active, passive, and mixed travelers about distances from a survey site to LA's city hall, the research demonstrated that the passive bus and subway riders have less of a grip on distance. Actively cognitive travelers, according to the results, were more likely to integrate street names in their directions, and also exhibited a sharper understanding of distances."
Of course people who navigate...are better at locating than people who are passengers.
This article does not need Slashdoted,
it needs a quick trip to dev null...
(provided someone can give it directions)
Unless, of course, you need directions on how to use the transit system.
Navigators know more about Navigation than People who don't Navigate
More at.... wait no, that's it.
This news brought to you by the Department of Redundancy Department Department.
Nobodies Prefect
Tidbits for Techs Technology Blog
I love our subway system. It takes you from one corner of the city to another without giving you even the foggiest idea how you got there. For all I know, I could be on a different planet and wouldn't know for sure. But then again, I'm not in it for the ride, I'm in it to get where I have to go.
While we're at it, I'm also pretty sure that most tourists know more about the monuments of various towns than the inhabitants. I'm pretty sure there have been more Japanese in Notre Dame in Paris than Frenchmen.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
I am struggling to figure out what we are supposed to do this information.
I deny that I have not avoided attaining the opposite of that which I do not want.
That's rather quaint in a world where many of us have a GPS in our pocket.
I know there's a relevant xkcd but I'm too lazy to look up the link.
#DeleteChrome
the street names above your head, on the street level? Or the distances between them? People may well just like to doze off, ignoring seriously irrelevant pieces of information.
Did these "cognitively active travelers" also know the telephones of those lived along their sublime subway line? Is the distance in miles or kilometers even a useful metric for distance in L.A.? In my mind minutes would be more useful. If these "cognitively active travelers" had been travelling these roads by car or bicycle before, yes. Of course they know them better than those who hadn't. What a flawed analysis to begin with. Why didn't the compare with people from Tokya and Ghana to see what their impressions were...
These "cognitively active travelers" sound like nut cases ready for Rainman 2. Maybe they should also include the authors of the actual article - Andrew M., Evelyn B. and Brian T.
I don't want directions.
I think it depends what king of trip planning you are looking for. I'm betting that if you want TRANSIT directions from A to B, asking a transit user is better. If you are seeking road directions, then of course you want to ask a road user (eg, a car driver)
If you ask a transit rider how to get there by car, they may not give you the best directions. Try asking them how to get there by bus. If they don't know the answer offhand, they certainly know how to quickly find out.
$x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
$x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
Shit, they make it sound like you just walk out your front door and after a short nap the driver wakes you up directly at your destination. I must be doing something wrong when I have to transfer to 3 different buses so I can pick up dinner on my way home. I may not be in the norm but after extensive travel on the bus system here over the years I've found that I have a better idea of where things than people that just drive straight to work/school and the grocery store day after day.
I move mostly by foot (despite an excellent public transport system in the city where I live), usually over 10 km per day.
The day before yesterday, somebody in a car asked me directions. I was able to give very precise directions, except as I noticed yesterday, that I sent them through one direction roads the wrong way. Why? Because that information is irrelevant to pedestrians, so I don't pay attention to that.
That people who drive may provide more useful directions to drivers than people who cycle; and vice versa.
That people who drive may provide more useful directions to drivers than people who cycle; and vice versa.
People who drive may provide better driving instructions. I was once cycling all day, and stupidly asked a driver for directions of something nearby, and didn't think that they could be wrong. I ended up on the highway with the state police pissed at me.
But ask a bike rider how to get from point to point by train...
http://michaelsmith.id.au
I've lived in a few different cities and I've always lived downtown close to work and gotten around mostly by walking and never had a car. I find that while I can give good directions to pedestrians I can't give good directions to motorists who stop and ask. This happened all the time in the last place I lived which was a big city that had a densely packed core with lots of one way streets that curved and didn't make much sense.
When I want to get somewhere I just walk in that direction turning here and there as the lights let me. I don't notice that you can't turn left onto such and such street or even that such and such is one way or there are barriers to traffic at some point and you can't drive through.
If you're driving it's probably best to ask another motorist for directions, though that's not always possible.
I bike 200-300 miles each week in trips each about 50-60mi. It's an old bike, and I ride just below my lung
capacity.
People that hear about it are awestruck, and tell me they would be exhaused even from driving the trip in
their car. I just shrug my shoulders and tell them that after having biked my route a couple of times you
get used to it and it doesn't seem 'far out'. The awe I'm met with is actually of a very particular kind, not
really disbelief, but almost always focuses on distance (and leaves the time aspect out of condideration).
What you described is a feature. I hate cars. Instead of one way roads, here we also have canals...
According to new research, drivers, walkers, and bicyclists will generally provide us with more useful directions than transit riders.
Well, bugger me with a fishfork, I never would've guessed.
Wait, is this to do with cognition and active navigation, or is just that transit riders are douchebags?
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
Usually I'm all for testing the obvious since when it doesn't turn out as you expect that's useful information.
But seriously...People who don't have to give a shit about directions because someone else is handling that for them aren't as good at giving directions as those who do in fact have to work out their own directions themselves. Astounding!
Transit riders and drivers/pedestrians are all navigating... they're just navigating entirely different sets of routes. The transit rider has a much simpler set of possiblt paths, but with the added complexity of time constraints (i.e. last subway at 3am, this bus line doesn't run on the weekend, if I catch this one I have to wait an extra 45 minutes *here*, etc).
Log in or piss off.
It also tells us about the way our politicians wants us to go - go in public transportation, don't think for yourself
Oooh, a chill suddenly springs up my spine ...
For the past decade or so I've been very puzzled by the decision of the Ministry of Education of Great Britain in teaching their students how to use Microsoft Words and Microsoft Powerpoint, instead of teaching them how to code...
Now I KNOW WHY !!
The motive is none other than to DUMB DOWN THE ENTIRE GENERATION OF PEOPLE so to make them that much more easily controllable !!
Just when you thought school is supposed to be the place to kids get educated ...
Many thanks for the enlightenment !!!
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
Heck, we might even find out that Fix-it-yourselfers know more about plumbing, wiring, door knobs etc and tend to name the tools to be used compared to people who just hire handymen.
There is even a possibility home schooling parents know in detail the lessons, the syllabus, how long it takes to cover a unit etc and even name the actual lessons to be taught compared to people who simply send their children to school.
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
I know people who know this system like the back of their hands. Would say things like, "I can take bus XYZ, get out when the bus stops at the signal at MG Road, run through the alleyway and catch bus ABC to Kurla. I can get there faster in the bus than those who ride the train". They seem to have a complete intersection graph of all the busses that ply any part of their commute. They solve a multiple traveling salesmen problem in an abstract space designated by bus routes, the intersection graph and time cost. The drivers have maps and a ready way to visualize their routes. These commuters operate in abstract space. It is probably why this urban planning institute does not even know the metrics by which one can measure the commuter's mind space.
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
From my experience with transit buses, the answer generally is "no".
Up until now when I've been driving and needed directions I'd keep an eye out for the first subway platform, park the car, walk downstairs, get on the first train I see and ask someone for directions.
Now I know there's a better way.
Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
To the passive rider problem.
Replace all transit vehicles with bicycle busses!
That is actually kinda scary to a guy like me. When I leave home, I know where I'm going, I know how to get there under my own power even if my car dies on me. I don't have to rely on a phone, or an app, or the kindness of strangers. I know how to get from point A to point B, and when I decide that a stop at point C is advisable, I just turn the wheel and go to point C. Something comes up that I need to go to point D, where I've never been before, all I insist on is a proper address, like "123 Main Street, Backwater, Nowhere, USA".
I simply can't imagine heading out the door, hoping that I can figure out how to make bus lines, train lines, subways and ferries all fit together.
Have you ever been in a hurry, and found that the connections would deliver you where you wanted to be, but four hours late? You would have been better off just canceling your plans, because everyone has gone home for the day!
In a car, or on a motorcycle, I can make my mind up that I can make meet the schedule, or that I can't. And, if I can't make the schedule, then I can reschedule for tomorrow, knowing that I'll just have to leave home some hours earlier than I might like.
"Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
Miles are more important to me, the guy relying on an internal combustion engine to get him there. I have an aversion to pushing my ride to the nearest gas station. The car gets 29.9 miles to the gallon, the bike gets 53 miles to the gallon. I want to know how many miles it is from point A to point B, and I'll get there in my own good time. Believe me, that time will be considerably faster than the bus you guys are riding on. In most cases, my time will rival that of a train that doesn't make stops along the way, and I'll always beat the train that has to make stops at every hamlet along the way.
"Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
Try asking a 14 year old kid for directions and you'd have an answer to your research study.
I noticed this when I moved to China. If I asked where we were going on a supplier visit out of town I was always given just a travel time not a general direction and distance as I would normally expect. I came to realise that was because of until a couple of years ago people did not own cars so all travel of any distance that could not be walked or cycled was via bus or train, so they though of a trip as time, not distance.
Even today, with many of our staff now owning cars, I am still given just time as an answer by default.
I remember even back into the 1970s transit riders were about as sharp as a bowling ball with directions. Washington, NYC, etc.. Didn't seem to matter. Once in a while you might find a guy that actually know what they were doing other than tuning out everything except their stop. Don't ask for advice on how to buy a card fare. Often they can't even get that right.
And somehow we made it to the moon.
Jesus, I hope we weren't on the line to pay for this "research".
Go to a new city. Just ride public transit for a few months. Then get a car.
Happened to me. The public transit routes were absolutely USELESS so far as knowing the city. They're designed that way, for economic reasons. Not laid-out so that you actually know how to get anywhere by any other method.