Journal Article10.1111/0017-4815.00113
Determinants of Residential Satisfaction: Ordered Logit vs. Regression Models
592
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the effects of housing, neighborhood, and household characteristics on individuals' satisfaction with both dwelling and neighborhood, in order to reconcile the inconsistencies in previous research.
read more
Abstract: Residential satisfaction is not only an important component of individuals' quality of life but also determines the way they respond to residential environment. An understanding of the factors that facilitate a satisfied or dissatisfied response can play a critical part in making successful housing policies. This study reinvestigates the effects of housing, neighborhood, and household characteristics on individuals' satisfaction with both dwelling and neighborhood, in order to reconcile the inconsistencies in the previous research. The empirical analysis uses data drawn from the American Housing Survey (AHS) and ordered logit models (OLM). OLM is more appropriate than the widely-used regression technique in such analysis due to the ordinal nature of the dependent variables representing satisfaction. The results show that residential satisfaction is a complex construct, affected by a variety of environmental and socio-demographic variables. While the actual effects of the variables by and large confirm earlier findings in the literature, significant differences between the results from the OLM and regression models were found. This indicates that regression models should be used with caution and their results accepted with a grain of salt.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Looking through the Models: A Critical Review of Residential Satisfaction
TL;DR: A review of residential satisfaction through the primary models used to study residential satisfaction in order to critique their strengths and weaknesses can be found in this paper , where the authors point out that researchers should clearly define the physical limits of proposed models and the relationships between residents and their residential environments when developing a residential satisfaction model.
Places in Transformation: Integrating Residents' Perspectives and Spatial Characteristics into the Assessment of Urban Quality of Life
Timo von Wirth
- 01 Jan 2014
TL;DR: This paper presents a meta-analysis of scenario interpretation with multi-scale narratives in the context of systematic science–practice collaboration in scenario development using a model derived from the “big data” model.
3
Exploring Indoor and Outdoor Residential Factors of High-Density Communities for Promoting the Housing Development
Kai Zhang,Dong Yan +1 more
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper surveyed the citizens' residential environment and satisfaction in dense urban residential areas to understand the factors impacting residential satisfaction in high-population metropolitan areas and found that 13 environmental factors significantly impact residential evaluation.