Evaluation of an Integrated Intermodal Travel Service
Markus C. Beutel
1
, Barbara S. Zaunbrecher
2
,
Simon Himmel
2
, Karl-Heinz Krempels
1
and Martina Ziefle
2
1
RWTH Aachen University, Information Systems, Aachen, Germany
2
RWTH Aachen University, Chair and Institute of Communication Science,
Human-Computer Interaction Center, Aachen, Germany
Keywords:
Travel Information, Integration, Service Bundling.
Abstract:
Combining heterogeneous mobility services during one single trip, intermodal traveling is hindered by barriers
on different levels. Especially, by incorporating (electric) sharing services, e.g., car- or bikesharing, complex
travel chains might occur. To provide flexible intermodal mobility to users, integration has to be realized
in various areas: Beyond the provision of comprehensive travel information, it is possible to integrate even
further on the business model level. Within a large field test of a comprehensive travel information system,
called Mobility Broker, perceptions towards an integrated offering of heterogeneous mobility services are
examined. Hereby, different services are not only integrated concerning travel information, but also in the area
of distribution. Results indicate that the solution has the potential to deliver extensive flexibility for mobility
users and to lower barriers towards alternative mobility modes. Nevertheless, transparent implementation is
required and capacity issues could form an obstructive bottleneck. Furthermore, data security and privacy
issues could be barriers for widespread acceptance of bundled tariffs.
1 INTRODUCTION
Contemporary mobility and transport modalities have
to meet a variety of criteria, which are difficult to
realize: They must meet community needs, such as
broad accessibility, comfort, safety, sustainability and
affordability. In the past, mobility options were not
interlinked, but today, they must be intermodal, flex-
ible and designed as “door-to-door” mobility chains.
Also, it is becoming increasingly important to inte-
grate users into the design process for new products
to achieve widespread diffusion and market accep-
tance (G
¨
oransson et al., 2004). This is also applicable
to infrastructure planning, in which citizens demand
to participate in decision processes. Thus, the pre-
dominantly technology-centered planning of infras-
tructural mobility concepts, without integrating citi-
zens into the decision making processes, is no longer
viable.
Beside single transitionsBeside single transitions,
e.g., from conventional to electric cars, from cars to
(e-)bikes, from personal to public transfer, a special
focus lies on the improvement of combined solutions:
Intermodal traveling (Spickermann et al., 2014). In-
termodal traveling, which describes the switching of
various heterogeneous modes of transportation during
one single trip (Nobis, 2013), is becoming increas-
ingly popular. Hence, city planners have to consider
comprehensive solutions for urban planning (Ziefle
et al., 2014). (Huwer, 2004) investigated beneficial
synergies of combined mobility services. (Digmayer
et al., 2015) especially underline ecological benefits
by incorporating environment-friendly modes, e.g.,
car- or bikesharing. But the utilization of intermodal
traveling is actually affected by barriers on different
levels.
Optimal integration of different mobility services
on comprehensive travel information systems is inves-
tigated in several research projects around the globe
(Beutel et al., 2015; Wells et al., 2013; Rehrl et al.,
2004). On this technical basis, business models have
to be adapted and aligned to new conditions.
Due to the heterogeneity of mobility services, the
integration in the area of distribution is challeng-
ing: sharing services differ substantially in utilization,
payment and tariff assessment base, compared to tra-
ditional public transport services. Moreover, different
and complex tariff systems have to be combined ef-
fectively.
Herewith, we primarily investigate the perceptions
of test persons towards an integrated offer consisting
of heterogeneous mobility services.
Beutel, M., Zaunbrecher, B., Himmel, S., Krempels, K-H. and Ziefle, M.
Evaluation of an Integrated Intermodal Travel Service.
In Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Smart Cities and Green ICT Systems (SMARTGREENS 2016), pages 363-371
ISBN: 978-989-758-184-7
Copyright
c
2016 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
363
Figure 1: Areas of integration.
The remainder of this work is structured as fol-
lows. Section 2 describes the relevant theoretical ba-
sis. Afterwards, Section 3 studies describes related
work and identifies the research gap. Section 4 de-
scribes the conditions of the conducted field test in
detail and presents the results. Finally, Section 5 con-
cludes the work.
2 THEORETICAL BACKGROUND
Intermodal traveling is hindered by various barriers at
different levels. On a technological basis, travel infor-
mation has to be provided via a comprehensive travel
information system. Thereby, travel information sys-
tems vary in extent and functionalities. In addition,
various heterogeneous tariff systems can be combined
on a business model level. Moreover, the mobility ser-
vice infrastructure can be provided in local proximity.
This section presents the relevant theories, con-
cerning the described integration layers (Figure 1).
2.1 (Advanced) Travel Information
Systems
Navigation systems for motorized individual trans-
port and timetable information systems for public
transportation services were initially developed sepa-
rately in form of stand-alone solutions (Rehrl et al.,
2004). Further developed travel information sys-
tems combined these approaches and provided rout-
ing even for buses and trains.
The steadily growing range of emerging trans-
portation modes, their heterogeneity as well as inter-
modal travel behavior demanded more complex and
comprehensive travel information systems. Advanced
travel information systems use information and com-
munication technology to provide travel information
to a wide range of users, who use different modes
of transportation with a diversity of characteristics
(McQueen et al., 2002). The assistance through ad-
vanced travel information systems goes beyond the
provision of information and enables to manage the
complexity of planning, booking and utilization of in-
termodal travel chains (Beul-Leusmann et al., 2013).
Hence, the routing becomes increasingly multi- and
intermodal (Hrncir, 2013). Accordingly, user require-
ments increase and become more divers (Vogelsang
et al., 2015), (Stopka and Fischer, 2015).
These travel information systems have the poten-
tial to optimize the execution in complex transport
networks (McQueen et al., 2002). By fostering the
combination of ecologically friendly modes with pub-
lic transportation services, a reduction of CO
2
emis-
sions can be achieved (Digmayer et al., 2015).
In principal, there is a large variety of travel in-
formation systems, which differ in range of covered
modes and functionalities. In Germany, famous sys-
tem examples are Qixxit
1
by Deutsche Bahn and
moovel
2
.
Moreover, SUPERHUB combines heterogeneous
mobility services with the help of intermodal routing
(Hrncir, 2013). The offers are additionally provided
via a mobile application. The system uses a flexi-
ble best price solution. Moreover, sustainable mobil-
ity behavior is encouraged by a behavior management
component (Wells et al., 2013).
OLYMPUS
3
is a B2B-system, that provides flexi-
ble multimodal transport solutions with focus on elec-
tric vehicle sharing (Buchinger et al., 2013). Main
emphasis is the efficient interconnection of sharing in-
frastructures of independent providers to realize syn-
ergy effects and to provide an uniform service to the
users.
2.2 Price Bundling
In principle, the subject bundling is located in the
theoretical field of pricing and has been investigated
for decades (Bouwman et al., 2007). With refer-
ence to information systems and web technologies,
the area is called e-Pricing (Brunken, 2010). Price-
bundling is described as the combination of multiple
1
/https://www.qixxit.de/en/
2
https://www.moovel.com/en/
3
http://www.proeftuin-olympus.be/en
SMARTGREENS 2016 - 5th International Conference on Smart Cities and Green ICT Systems
364
identifiable products, services or rights of one or mul-
tiple providers, sold via one package-offering with
an aggregated price (Diller, 2008). Price-bundling
is closely interwoven with product-bundling, (Wied-
mann et al., 2001) and describes the combination of
multiple products. As a consequence, bundling incor-
porates both: a product or service assortment-aspect
as well as a price-aspect (Diller, 2008). Hence, the
term service-bundling refers especially to a combina-
tion of services instead of products or goods.
(Kotler, 1999) distinguishes different product lev-
els, e.g., the core product or augmented products, de-
pending on their function for the bundle. Bundling
can be designed and implemented in several forms:
Pure-bundling refers to selling a bundle exclusively.
This means that it is not possible to purchase prod-
uct parts of the bundle separately. In the opposite
scenario, called mixed-bundling, both the bundle and
the individual products are offered. Another form of
bundling are tie-in sales, where the buyer of one main
product agrees to buy one or several complementary
goods, which are necessary to use the main product
(Simon and Wuebker, 1999). There are some addi-
tional forms of bundling, e
˙
g
˙
. add-on bundling or cross
couponing, which will not be discussed further, be-
cause of their limited applicability in the area of het-
erogeneous mobility services.
Bundling products or services is a widespread
practice (Bouwman et al., 2007; Simon and Wuebker,
1999): Microsoft Office combines several office ap-
plications, e.g., Word or Excel. Another example are
menus sold by McDonald’s, usually consisting of a
burger, french-fries and a soft drink. These menus
are often sold with a certain discount, compared to
the aggregation of separate prices. Within the areas
of service bundles, (Kr
¨
amer, 2009) investigated the
bundling of telecommunication services.
(Wiedmann et al., 2001) define a process of an in-
tegrated pricing- and product-strategy, which consists
of the following steps: Determining frame conditions,
identification of customer preferences / willingness to
pay, price & product optimization, development of an
integrated price- and product strategy and implemen-
tation.
3 RELATED WORK
(Huwer, 2004) investigated the combination of car-
sharing and public transportation services in two Ger-
man regions, Aachen and Mannheim. In this scenario,
carsharing services were offered as an add-on to pub-
lic transportation. The studies showed, that combined
offers can be beneficial from providers as well as from
customers’ perspective. In particular, new customer
segments could be won.
(Hoffmann et al., 2012) examined some effects
of a combination for public transportation, electronic
car- and bikesharing. They provided a smart card so-
lution, serving as an integrated authorization method.
The tariff consisted of a time based subscription to
public transportation modes, supplemented by a spec-
ified contingent for sharing services. They concluded
that a tariff combination holds big potential to in-
crease user flexibility. Moreover, they underlined pos-
itive user behavioral changes in form of substituting
people’s own cars.
Collectively, (Huwer, 2004) and (Hoffmann et al.,
2012), investigated combined offerings of heteroge-
neous mobility services. Their holistic studies also
incorporated the pricing area, but without addressing
any price biases. (Wirtz, 2014) especially focused on
the effects of flexible tariffs of public transportation
modes, provided by electronic fare management sys-
tems. The author examined significant psychological
effects of flat-rate-offerings, influencing the mobility
behavior.
This work distinguishes itself from the described
contributions primarily concerning the travel informa-
tion system, Mobility Broker, which constitutes the
central part of the following studies. The main em-
phasis is on system features considering the distribu-
tion of heterogeneous mobility services, incorporat-
ing an integrated booking, accounting and pricing.
4 FIELD TEST
To examine user’s perceptions from manifold per-
spectives, we conducted a field test, consisting of two
phases. Within these phases, qualitative as well as
quantitative data on user’s perceptions were collected.
The test was conducted by using the comprehensive
travel information system “Mobility Broker”, whose
architecture and functionalities are described in (Beu-
tel et al., 2015) using the IXSI interface (Kluth et al.,
2015). The system allows to query, book and uti-
lize heterogeneous modes of transportation of inde-
pendent mobility providers. Moreover, integrated ac-
counting functionalities for intermodal travel chains
are provided. Specific test conditions and results are
presented in the following chapters.
4.1 Prerequisites and Conditions
In August 2015, the mobility station at RWTH Uni-
versity Campus successfully opened for an initial test
phase. The station locally combines electronic car-
Evaluation of an Integrated Intermodal Travel Service
365
Figure 2: Impressions of a test user, interacting with the system at the campus’ mobility station.
and bikesharing as well as public transportation ser-
vices. Within this phase, services were provided by
ASEAG (local public transportation services com-
pany) as well as VeloCity Aachen (local e-bikesharing
services). Participants had the possibility to use two
e-cars and up to four e-bikes, connected to respec-
tive charging stations. In addition, the participants’
access card enabled them to use public transport ser-
vices (bus).
In a second, constitutive test phase, we observed
14 test users in more detail. We selected participants
under the premise of possession of, or access to an
android smart-phone device and regular presence (oc-
cupationally or study related) in the area of the pro-
vided mobility services. Figure 2 depicts some im-
pressions of test users, interacting with the mobility
services at the mobility station. This test setting en-
abled the users to become familiar with the system on
the one hand and on the other hand, allowed to gain
valuable qualitative insights.
After registration, a key card and an authorization
PIN were provided to each participant. In addition,
the obligatory front-end mobile application, devel-
oped by RegioIT GmbH and RWTH Aachen Univer-
sity for android smartphones, was provided as well.
Beyond the querying, intermodal trip planning, book-
ing and reservation of services, the application al-
lowed to check actual mobility quotas.
During two introductory test days, users had to
complete the following use cases, accompanied by
the researchers: Small groups, consisting of two per-
sons each, initially had to query for available services
around them. After checking the bikesharing capac-
ities, they had to unlock, use and return an e-bike
by smart card and mobile application. Thereupon,
probands had to use the e-smarts with the mobile ap-
plication and the smart card as well. In the process
users especially learned to (dis-)connect the vehicle
as well as the authorization at the respective charging
station. Following the introductory days, participants
had the possibility to use the system for the duration
of 4 weeks. In principal, this usage was free of charge,
but it was recommended to consider a provided mo-
bility test quota.
4.2 Field Test Results
In the following, first the qualitative results from com-
ments of the test users are presented, followed by the
quantitative data gathered from a survey among test
users.
SMARTGREENS 2016 - 5th International Conference on Smart Cities and Green ICT Systems
366
Table 1: Qualitative evaluation results.
System Functionalities
“The system informs me. Hence, I include more possibilities into my decision process (...).
“I could use routes I had not known before.
“You don’t have to go to a station to check for capacities.
“Need to implement the functionality to display vehicle battery status.
As a result of misinformation (caused by wrong predictions / false capacity notifications), the trust into the
system disappears and the usage decreases.
“(...) i wished for an centralized feedback portal to avoid contacting employees every time.
“More information concerning actual travels with notifications etc..
“Problem: user data is handed to other providers.
Services
“I use different services than before, e.g., bikesharing.
“I am more inclined to switch from my own car to car- and bikesharing.
“More frequent switches of used modes.
“(...) The right mode of transportation every time, depending on the current requirements.
“Larger reach for electronic cars needed, to reach destinations that are far away.
“Bikes need porter and bicycle lock.
“Integration of parking services/space into the system!”
“Easier/ faster unlocking of e-cars needed.
Pricing
“With an integrated tariff, I personally would use more modes that before and maybe use car- and bikeshar-
ing more consciously.
“Tariffs for bikesharing are more attractive in warmer seasons.”,
“Better overview of available quotas.
“More different tariffs to choose between would be desirable.
Infrastructure
“More stations for car- and bikesharing needed.
“Carsharing stations need more lighting.
“(...) relatively flexible and spontaneous decision making, under the circumstances that the infrastructure
is suitably developed.
Qualitative Results
First, the qualitative results from the test group are
presented. For evaluation purposes we categorized
the participants’ responses and summarized them in
Table 1. Test-persons had the possibility to respond to
open survey questions if the information systems in-
fluences their mobility behavior, if their had positive
or negative experiences and if their had critics and re-
marks.
Concerning the system integration, users espe-
cially stated the centralized travel information as a
main advantage: Various responses, e.g, “The system
informs me. Hence, I include more possibilities into
my decision process (...). indicate that comprehen-
sive travel information results in a more varied mobil-
ity behaviour. One person remarked especially “(...)
relatively flexible and spontaneous decision making,
under the circumstances, that the infrastructure is suit-
ably developed. However, possible drawbacks were
identified, too: As a result of misinformation (caused
by wrong predictions / false capacity notifications),
the trust into the system disappears and the usage de-
creases.
Concerning the transportation services, more
specifically concerning the e-cars, faster and easier
unlocking was required. In addition, test persons re-
quired a larger range for the electric vehicles. With
reference to the e-bikes a test person commended that
a “porter and a bicycle lock” would be useful. Even
the integration of available parking space was stated
as a desirable additional service.
With a tariff bundle, one person “(...) would use
Evaluation of an Integrated Intermodal Travel Service
367
more modes than before and maybe use car- and bike-
sharing more conscious”. Test persons stated, that
personalized (and seasonal) price bundles would be
beneficial.
Quantitative Results
In addition to the qualitative research, we conducted
a survey to quantify perceptions and opinions of par-
ticipants. The survey aimed exclusively at partici-
pants of the test phases. 37 persons responded in to-
tal. Because of partially incomplete surveys, up to 29
datasets were usable for quantitative evaluations. 7
of the test persons were female, 22 were male. The
majority of participants (55.2%) were students. Con-
cerning the usual mobility behavior, 41.4% stated not
to use carsharing. Even more (55.2%) do not already
use bikesharing yet.
In a five point Likert scale, (1= very negative, 5=
very positive), we asked test- persons how they eval-
uate the integration of heterogeneous transportation
services on the basis of information systems. In gen-
eral, 24 of 27 persons evaluate the integration posi-
tively or very positively. Especially the system Mobil-
ity Broker is evaluated positively or very positively by
19 of 26 test persons. This could possibly be a result
of the prototypical status of the system and the lim-
ited infrastructure so far. Moreover, 62.5% of the par-
ticipants evaluate service bundles positively or very
positively.
In addition, we asked, if test-persons agree on be-
ing more open towards specific modes of transporta-
tion after using the system (five point Likert scale,
1=totally disagree, 5= completely agree). 22 of 28
persons state to be more open (rather agree or com-
pletely agree) towards carsharing services after using
the system. Similar results were evaluated for bike-
sharing services (21 of 28 test-persons). Asked if
test-persons agree on preferring to pay mobility ser-
vices separately, the majority (60.0%) does not tend
to do so (rather agree or completely agree). Answer-
ing a Yes or No- decision, 62.0% think that the quotas
should not be bound monthly. Moreover, test-persons
had to state their preferred quota for sharing services
in one month. The required average budget for bike-
sharing is 18.9 hours per month, for carsharing 20.2
hours and 154.4 kilometers per month.
Central part of the survey is the evaluation of se-
lected aspects of integration, depicted in figure Figure
3. The Figure shows the importance of test-persons
towards specific aspects, which was asked via a fife
step Likert scale from very important to completely
unimportant. It is remarkable, that the basic degree
of importance of all investigated aspects is high. This
indicates that the general topic of integration in the
intermodal context is highly relevant for test-persons.
However, ”integrated user data” presents an exception
to this general trend, which could be due to increased
sensitivity of users towards issues of privacy and se-
curity.
In general, services can be priced depending on
the actual use or alternatively via an fixed price. Ten-
dencies towards a fixed price / flat rate solution can
be observed. This phenomenon is called flat rate bias.
This tendency can not be explained exclusively de-
pending on the characteristics of usage, but rather on
beneficial effects, that go beyond the simple monetary
value of the services (Wirtz, 2014). Various scientific
studies investigated price biases in manifold service
sectors before (Stingel, 2008), (Wirtz, 2014), (Tobies,
2009).
Because of the prototypical system status, inves-
tigation of changes in use as an result of a specific
pricing measure seem not reliable for this particular
case. Therefore, the focus in this work has so far been
on motivational aspects. However, to get an idea of
the possible effects of a flat-rate offer in the context
of integrated mobility solutions, the price bias was in-
vestigated preliminarily. Our studies rely on the bias
declaration construct by (Wirtz, 2014), who investi-
gated the following effects: An insurance effect rep-
resents the fact, that a customer appreciates, a fixed
price which is not as volatile as prices depending on
the actual usage. The items used in the questionnaire
are formulated accordingly to (Wirtz, 2014), with lit-
tle adjustments due to the new context. For the insur-
ance effect, we used the formulation ”I prefer to be
safe and pay the fixed price. For this, it is never go-
ing to be more expensive.”. Moreover, a fixed price
allows to spontaneously increase the usage of mobil-
ity services without a significant increase of the costs.
According to specific theories, costs weight differ-
ently, depending on the point of time, at which they
occur. In case of flexible tariffs, costs occur promptly
and are perceived more grave, whereas the paying of
fixed tariffs is more pleasant, which is described as
the taximeter effect. With the item ”Would the price
not be fixed, I constantly would try to save a trip.
This would be stressfull and take too much time.
the taxameter effect had been evaluated. A reason-
able choice among prices can only occur even if all
relevant information is present. The convenience ef-
fects represents the value of fixed prices for the cus-
tomer, who do not have to collect and compare vari-
ous prices of heterogeneous mobility services. There-
fore, we used the formulation ”The effort to deter-
mine the cheapest price, normally is not worth it.”.
Finally, the self-discipline-effect describes the desire
SMARTGREENS 2016 - 5th International Conference on Smart Cities and Green ICT Systems
368
Figure 3: Importance of selected integration factors.
to change the actual consuming behavior, which was
evaluated with the item ”In case of paying a fixed
price, I potentially would chose other destinations as
usual and travel to them via different modes of trans-
portation.”. All items were evaluated in a fife step lik-
ert scale, starting from totally disagreement to com-
plete agreement as well as providing two gradations
and a undecided-option.
Concerning the investigated service bundles, sur-
vey results show that there is some agreement con-
cerning insurance (48.1% agreement, n=27), taxame-
ter (48.1% agreement, n=27) and self-discipline ef-
fects (59.3% agreement, n=27) in the multimodal
context. Only the convenience effect is estimated sig-
nificantly weaker (22.2% agreement, n=27). These
results incorporate rather agreement and complete
agreement of test-persons. This indicates that test-
persons tend to be price conscious concerning the in-
corporated modes of transportation. A possible ex-
planation could be that a majority of test-persons
were students, who already possess a student-ticket
for public transportation services.
5 DISCUSSION
This study examined perceptions of test persons qual-
itatively as well as quantitatively, in a usage-context
concerning an integration of heterogeneous mobility
services, based on the travel information system Mo-
bility Broker.
In general, results underline that all investigated
aspects of integration are important to the test per-
sons. This indicates that mobility providers should
pay attention to this topic and cooperate to satisfy the
need of an heterogeneous mobility behavior free from
barriers on different levels.
Various sources have underlined the beneficial po-
tential of combined mobility services (Huwer, 2004;
Hoffmann et al., 2012). The field test and the survey
underline these results by showing that participants
were more aware of options such as car- and bike-
sharing and also more motivated to use them. This
was shown in the comments as well as the quantita-
tive survey. In this respect, it could be shown that
the bundled tariffs can play an important role for the
promotion of new mobility concepts and modes of
transport (sharing models and electromotive). How-
ever, the field test also exposed disadvantages and
challenges of price bundling for mobility tariffs that
could possibly hinder the widespread acceptance of
such tariffs. It has become clear that the participants
need to make a trade-off between the convenience
of getting information, booking and billing via one
platform and privacy, by giving away their personal
data to several providers of mobility services at once.
Furthermore, their mobility usage needs to be moni-
tored in a scenario where they buy particular “mobil-
ity budgets” (range or time), which could raise data
security and privacy issues. The participants also re-
quested more transparent information on various lev-
els, e.g. a battery display for e-bikes and a notifica-
tion when they reached the limit of their prepaid mo-
bility budget. For the use of social networks, it has
been shown that misuse of personal data is something
that concerns users, and that this was independent of
perceived control over one’s data (Kowalewski et al.,
2015). Although mobility services are not connected
to personal data like personal preferences for prod-
ucts, photos and videos (as it is the case in social net-
works), the fear of data misuse might also affect mo-
bility platforms with bundled services. Future studies
Evaluation of an Integrated Intermodal Travel Service
369
will therefore need to evaluate how providing of in-
formation and control of data to the users affects ac-
ceptance of mobility tariffs. Concerning the bundled
travel information, usability will become an impor-
tant issue, as complexity increases with the amount of
information displayed, especially on mobile devices
(Habermann et al., 2015). When looking at the effects
of flatrate tickets, participants overall did not agree
that it was too tiresome to look for a cheap tariff and
choosing the flatrate instead. This could be an effect
of the relatively young sample, who were mostly stu-
dents and therefore typically do not have an income
of their own yet. They might therefore be more cost-
conscious. This shows that special pricing models for
different target groups might be needed, according to
different user requirements. A further issue examined
referred to the validity of the mobility budget: When
tariffs are created in the way that the mobility bud-
get, e.g. kilometers bought for car-sharing usage, is
cut at the end of the month, this might lead to several
problems: All users who have not used up their bud-
get until the end of the month might want to use car-
sharing in the last days of the month to make the most
of their tariff. This might cause capacity problems
when no more cars are available, which in turn could
cause frustration among users. This tariff-design was
unattractive for almost two thirds of our test-users.
Alternatively, packages of kilometers and time could
be offered which do not expire after one month, but
can be used over a longer period of time. This result
further illustrates that care has to be taken with regard
to the details of the tariff design, considering possible
limits of the infrastructure as well as user preferences.
5.1 Limitations and Future Work
Concerning the field test, the mobility services some-
times were not available for limited times because of
the prototypical status of the system. Many responses
of participants referred to the limited test area. Future
research promises valuable findings with an extended
infrastructure, covering more of the surrounding area.
This would indeed increase the usefulness of the spe-
cific services for the users. As another consequence
of the prototypical status of the system, we created the
described field test free of any charges. Specific pay-
ment of the services could possibly influence some of
the results. Interesting future studies could investigate
the exact changes of the mobility behavior, depending
on selected service bundles.
As other studies show, people’s preferences
may vary among different user groups (Ziefle and
Wilkowska, 2015). Hence, investigating other spe-
cific groups of users is necessary as well.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This work was partially funded by German Federal
Ministry of Economic Affairs and Energy for the
project Mobility Broker (01ME12136) as well as the
Excellence Initiative of the German State and Federal
Government (Project Urban Future Outline). The au-
thors thank Velocity UHG, IVU Traffic Technologies
AG, RegioIT GmbH and ASEAG for the industrial
cooperation. Especially, we thank Birgit Brand, Wal-
ter Eßer, Anais Habermann and Katharina Finke for
their valuable support.
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