id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-303878-v2n9jeeb Stiles, Jonathan Working at home and elsewhere: daily work location, telework, and travel among United States knowledge workers 2020-09-05 .txt text/plain 7665 324 50 (2017) used Canadian time use data to explore the relationship of working from different locations with travel, finding that some patterns of working from home were associated with less overall travel, a decreased likelihood of traveling at peak travel times, and an increased likelihood of using a non-motorized form of transport. The third section presents the results from the peak hour travel participation multinomial logistic regression models, and the final section augments this with a survival analysis of initial departure times to shed light on a mechanism of morning peak hour avoidance related to homebased work. When we combine homeworking with other non-workplace locations, such as someone who works at home in the morning and goes to a café to work later in the day, the higher likelihood of avoidance of at least some peak hour work travel remains. ./cache/cord-303878-v2n9jeeb.txt ./txt/cord-303878-v2n9jeeb.txt