What Type of Person Would Be Willing to Fly with Children? A Multi-Model Analysis

Sean R Crouse, Elizabeth K. Combs, Katherine Bell, Geovanny Lopez, Lissa S. Bern, Kimberly M. Bracewell, Scott R. Winter, Stephen Rice

Research output: Contribution to conferencePoster

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to assess the type of person who would be willing to fly with children in various scenarios.

A quantitative methodology and a non-experimental research approach were used in this study. A two-stage approach created a regression equation then assessed model fit. Six hundred and twenty participants were recruited for the study. The dataset was split randomly into two groups to facilitate the two-stage approach, resulting in 310 participants per stage. The study used 14 possible predictors to determine willingness to fly in five different scenarios.

Five models were created and found between two and four predictors of passengers who were willing to fly with children in various scenarios. We were able to explain between 14.3% and 18.6% of the variance. All five equations were assessed for model fit and found to support a good model fit.

Many aviation studies have examined willingness to fly in various scenarios; however, no research specific to the type of person who would be willing to fly with children has been explored. This study aims to fill that gap by exploring the type of person who would fly with children in five different scenarios.

Original languageAmerican English
StatePublished - Apr 2022
EventDiscovery Day 2022 -
Duration: Apr 1 2022 → …

Conference

ConferenceDiscovery Day 2022
Period4/1/22 → …

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