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Traveler
Information >
What Is It?
- Traveler services information tells travelers
about attractions and travel conditions along their route. The
emphasis is on amenities rather than necessities. The type of
information includes lodging rates and availability, location
and availability of parking spaces, restaurants, entertainment
venues, tourist sites and significant local features such as hospitals,
airports, train stations and police stations. Traditionally, this
information has been conveyed through guidebooks, roadside stands
and tourist information booths.
- Advanced traveler services information systems
communicate to travelers via on-board computers such as GM's Onstar
and other wireless devices, broadcast radio, cell phone, Web phone
and other mobile wireless digital communications devices. Computerized
kiosks and dedicated phone lines can also communicate advanced
traveler services information.
- The 511 Traffic Information Service is a telephone-based system
that provides real-time information on road surface and weather
conditions, accidents, road closures, work zones, public transportation
scheduling and tourism.
- The database can be static or dynamic. An example
of dynamic data would be a real-time list of available tickets
to events, hotel rooms, parking spaces or restaurant reservations.
- Communication can be one-way or interactive.
- Wireless phone location technology is being explored
for use in a system that can tell phone users about attractions
near them whether they requested the information or not. See our
Telecommunications Diagram on Internet-based
Traveler Information for more information.
Key Results
- Early advanced traveler information systems seemed
to work best when they were targeted to a certain locale, such
as Yosemite, Orlando or a downtown urban core, a specific event,
such as the Atlanta Olympics in 1996, or a specific audience,
such as, in France, vacationers and tourists in general.
- Users place a high value on accurate comprehensive
data that is easy to find and understand. Conversely, users show
little tolerance for unreliable devices or inaccurate information.
- The lack of standardized databases has hampered
implementation of regional or national traveler services information
systems using two-way wireless devices such as GM's Onstar, though
if the number of cars equipped with such devices continues to
grow at the current rapid rate, there may be enough market incentives
for the creation of such services.
- There is no reliable evidence of the elasticity
of demand for advanced traveler services information. However,
when the toll-free number in Boston was replaced with a call costing
10 cents, use fell dramatically.
- Devices for multiple users in public spaces must
be deployed in adequate numbers to make them highly visible, and
they must be well-maintained, because one unproductive encounter
can discourage repeat use.
- Privacy concerns have limited the use of location
technology to communicate unsolicited, customized information,
for example over Web-based phones.
Benefits
- Some evidence suggests that travelers who use
advanced traveler services information can reduce their travel
time compared to those who use printed materials, which means
less congestion and more efficient use of the transportation network.
- There is also some evidence that travelers who
use a well-designed advanced traveler information system experience
fewer accidents than those who consult printed maps.
- In France, the SERTI system has been shown to
reduce congestion during discrete periods such as long weekends
and national holidays.
Costs
- The cost of creating and updating a database.
The lack of common, interchangeable databases from various regional
sources makes it difficult to achieve economies of scale. Efforts
to offset these costs by advertising or changing a participation
fee risk undermining the databases' credibility among users and
raise equity issues among potential subscribers. For example,
a database limited to businesses that had paid a fee might not
be comprehensive enough to be of any value.
- Installing and maintaining the communication
devices in public spaces.
- Installing and maintaining the network for collecting
and communicating the data to different devices.
Where is it implemented?
- Yosemite Valley and the immediate region (the
YATI system).
- Orlando (TravTek)
- Atlanta
- Boston (SmartTraveler)
- Seattle (SWIFT)
- France (SERTI)
Author: Phyllis Orrick
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