Abstract
The excess-commuting literature provides a methodological framework in which the observed average commute (Cobs) is compared with theoretical commuting values: the minimum (Cmin) and maximum (Cmax) average commute. In this paper, I argue that real spatial behavior is ill represented by the two assumptions of optimal (minimizing or maximizing) behavior. Cmin and Cmax are in fact extreme values of a much richer distribution of commuting possibilities. I argue that all those possibilities should be taken into account in the evaluation of Cobs. In order to do this, I develop a probabilistic framework where any urban form is associated with a statistical distribution of commuting possibilities, with an average and a standard deviation, within which Cmin and Cmax represent extreme and very improbable outcomes. Applied to a sample of fifty metropolitan areas, this framework helps us understand the combined association of spatial behavior and urban form with commuting.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
