Peer-reviewed journal articles (*indicates student co-author. Altmetric score greater than 20 is considered significant.)
Schoner, J., Sanders, R., & Goddard, T. (2023) Effects of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems on Impact Velocity and Injury Severity: An Exploration of Data from the Crash Investigation Sampling System. Transportation Research Record, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/03611981231189740
Goddard, T., McDonald, A.D., Wei, R.* & Batra, D.* (2022) “Advanced Driver Assistance Systems in Top-Selling Vehicles in the United States: Cost, Vehicle Type, and Trim Level Disparities.” Transport Findings, September. https://doi.org/10.32866/001c.38291
Ralph, K., Goddard, T., Thigpen, C., & Davis, R. (2022) “Intervening at the blotter, not the broadcast: Improving crash coverage by targeting police press releases.” Transportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives, 15, 100669. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.trip.2022.100669 (Altmetric score 59)
Kim, A.J.*, Alambeigi*, H., Goddard, T., McDonald, A.D., & Anderson, B.A. (2021) “Bicyclist-evoked arousal and greater attention to bicyclists independently promote safer driving. Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 6, 66. https://doi.org/10.1186/s41235-021-00332-y.
Goddard, T., McDonald, A.D., Alambeigi, H., Kim, A.J., & Anderson, B.A. (2020) “Unsafe bicyclist overtaking behavior in a simulated driving task: the role of implicit and explicit attitudes.” Accident Analysis & Prevention. (Accepted 13 May 2020)
Goddard, T., Ralph, K., Thigpen, C. G., & Iacobucci, E. (2019) “Does news coverage of traffic crashes affect perceived blame and preferred solutions? Evidence from an experiment. “Transportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives, 3, 100073. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.trip.2019.100073
Ralph, K., Iacobucci, E., Thigpen, C. G., & Goddard, T. (2019) “Editorial Patterns in Bicyclist and Pedestrian Crash Reporting.” Transportation Research Record, 2673(2), 663–671. https://doi.org/10.1177/0361198119825637
Singleton, P. & Goddard, T. (2016) “Cycling by Choice or Necessity? Exploring the Gender Gap in Bicycling in Oregon.” In Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board of the National Academies, Washington, DC. 1956: (in press).
Goddard, T., Kahn, K. B., & Adkins, A. (2015). Racial bias in driver yielding behavior at crosswalks. Transportation Research Part F: Traffic Psychology and Behaviour, 33, 1–6. http://doi.org/10.1016/j.trf.2015.06.002
Goddard, T., Handy, S., Cao, X., & Mokhtarian, P. (2006). Voyage of the SS Minivan: Women’s Travel Behavior in Traditional and Suburban Neighborhoods. Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board, 1956, 141–148. http://doi.org/10.3141/1956-18
Other Edited Works
Goddard, T. & Hood, D., Editors (2019). TR News Special Issue on Women in Transportation, Transportation Research Board.
Goddard, T. (2017) “Bicycle.” In World Book Encyclopedia. Vol. 2. Chicago, IL: World Book, Inc., a Scott Feltzer Company.
Goddard, T. (2016) “Theorizing bicycle justice using social psychology: Examining the intersection of mode and race with the Conceptual Model of Roadway Interactions.” In Golub, A., Hoffman, M., Lugo, A., & Sandoval, G. (Eds.), Bicycle Justice and Urban Transformation: Biking for All?. New York, NY: Routledge: 100-113.
White papers and Reports
Monsere, C., Dill, J., McNeil, N., Clifton, K., Foster, N., Goddard, T., … Parks, J. (2014). Lessons From The Green Lanes: Evaluating Protected Bike Lanes In the U.S. Retrieved from http://trid.trb.org/view/2014/M/1312752
Conference papers and presentations
Goddard, T. (Scheduled, August 2016) “Exploring Drivers’ Attitudes and Behaviors toward Bicyclists: Explicit and Implicit Attitudes and Self-Reported Safety Behaviors.” 2016 International Conference on Traffic and Transport Psychology. Brisbane, Australia.
Goddard, T. (2016) “Exploring Drivers’ Attitudes and Behaviors toward Bicyclists: Explicit and Implicit Attitudes and Self-Reported Safety Behaviors.” Eisenhower Innovative Doctoral Research Showcase, TRB 95th Annual Meeting, Washington, DC.
Goddard, T., Dill, J., & Monsere, C. (2016). “Driver Attitudes about Bicyclists: Negative Evaluations of Rule-Following and Predictability.” In TRB 95th Annual Meeting Compendium of Papers. Washington, DC.
Goddard, T., Dill, J., & Monsere, C. (2016). “Driver Attitudes about Bicyclists: Negative Evaluations of Rule-Following and Predictability.” At 55th Annual Conference of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning (ACSP). Houston, TX.
Dill, J., Goddard, T., & Monsere, C. (2015) Can Protected Bike Lanes Help Close the Gender Gap in Cycling? Lessons from Five Cities. In TRB 94th Annual Meeting Compendium of Papers. Washington, DC.
Goddard, T., Kahn, K. B., & Adkins, A. (2014) “Racial Bias in Driver Yielding Behavior at Crosswalks.” At 28th International Congress of Applied Psychology. Paris, France.
Goddard, T. & Dill, J. (2014) “Adolescent Attitudes toward Active Travel: A Multi-Year Look at Gender and Age Effects.” At the 2014 Active Living Research Annual Conference, San Diego, California.
Goddard, T., Kahn, K. B., & Adkins, A. (2014) “Exploring Racial Bias in Drivers’ Behavior at Pedestrian Crossings.” At the 2014 Active Living Research Annual Conference, San Diego, California. Winner: People’s Choice for Best Poster Content
Goddard, T. & Dill, J. (2014). “Gender Differences in Adolescent Attitudes about Active Travel.” At the 93rd Annual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board. Author copy Goddard Dill Adolescents TRB 2014.
Goddard, T. & Dill, J. (2013). “Betwixt and Be ‘Tween’: The Divergence of Attitudes about Active Travel Among Preteen Girls and Boys.” At the 2013 Active Living Research Annual Conference, San Diego, California.
Selected Non-Academic Talks and Media Coverage
“What Do Drivers Really Think About Cyclists?” The Atlantic’s City Lab. 2016
Mt. Hood Community College STEM Seminar Series, Gresham, OR 2015
Invited talk: Exploring Drivers’ Attitudes and Behaviors toward
Bicyclists: Explicit and Implicit Attitudes, Behaviors, and Inattentional Blindness
“Walking while black” can be dangerous too, study finds.” The Washington Post.
“Drivers Show Signs Of Racial Bias At Crosswalks, Initial Study Finds.”
The Huffington Post.
“Do Drivers Discriminate Against Minorities at Crosswalks?”
The Atlantic’s City Lab.
“Rudeness is contagious.” The Boston Globe.
“Amerikaanse zwarten moeten langer wachten aan zebrapad dan blanken.”
De Morgen (Belgium).
Velo Cult & NWNOGGIN “Velocortical” lecture series, Portland, OR 2014
Invited talk: Moving in Contested Space: Exploring Bias in the Street
“For girls on bikes, new research shows a turning point: age 14.” BikePortland 2013
“PSU researcher delving into “multimodal road rage””. BikePortland.