Measuring the Acceptability of Self-Balancing Two-Wheeled Personal Mobility Vehicles

Many studies on the development, on-road compatibility, and market potential of personal mobility vehicles have been conducted in recent years. This study focuses on the social acceptability of personal mobility vehicles by the general public, which is a key factor in the future introduction and implementation of these vehicles. Using survey data collected from 124 respondents from the city of Toyota, this study empirically explores the attitudes of the general public toward self-balancing two-wheeled vehicles and differences in the public’s acceptance of such vehicles before and after using them. Potential uses of these vehicles include tourism and excursions, short-distance trips in downtown areas, and traversing within buildings. Causal relationships between the acceptability of self-balancing two-wheeled vehicles and attitudes toward various characteristics of these vehicles are also analyzed in this study. The empirical results indicate that attitudes toward self-balancing two-wheeled vehicles increase after using the vehicles. The causal relationships between the acceptability of and attitudes toward self-balancing two-wheeled vehicles are identified using structural equation modeling.

[1]  S. Chaiken,et al.  The psychology of attitudes. , 1993 .

[2]  Kimihiko Nakano,et al.  Proposal for Personal Mobility Vehicle , 2009 .

[3]  R. Likert “Technique for the Measurement of Attitudes, A” , 2022, The SAGE Encyclopedia of Research Design.

[4]  Caroline J Rodier,et al.  Improving California's Bay Area Rapid Transit District Connectivity and Access with Segway Human Transporter and Other Low-Speed Mobility Devices , 2005 .

[5]  I. Ajzen The theory of planned behavior , 1991 .

[6]  Ang Li,et al.  An analysis on users' evaluation for self-balancing two-wheeled personal mobility vehicles , 2012, 2012 15th International IEEE Conference on Intelligent Transportation Systems.

[7]  Mary Pat McKay,et al.  Serious injuries related to the Segway® personal transporter: a case series. , 2011, Annals of emergency medicine.

[8]  Karl T. Ulrich,et al.  ESTIMATING THE TECHNOLOGY FRONTIER FOR PERSONAL ELECTRIC VEHICLES , 2005 .

[9]  Jason F Kennedy,et al.  Segway Rider Behavior , 2008 .

[10]  L. Steg,et al.  Explaining differences in acceptability before and acceptance after the implementation of a congestion charge in Stockholm , 2010 .

[11]  Toshiyuki Yamamoto,et al.  An analysis of the effects of French vehicle inspection program and grant for scrappage on household vehicle transaction , 2004 .

[12]  Ryosuke Ando,et al.  Acceptability of Personal Mobility Vehicles to Public in Japan: Results of Social Trial in Toyota City , 2013 .

[13]  Bonita Sawatzky,et al.  The segway personal transporter as an alternative mobility device for people with disabilities: a pilot study. , 2007, Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation.