Bishop, Daniel T.
Digaeva, Aina
Funding for this research was provided by:
Brunel University London (Brunel Impact Funding)
Article History
Received: 24 March 2025
Accepted: 2 July 2025
First Online: 18 August 2025
Declarations
:
: All data were collected in accordance with The Declaration of Helsinki (2024): .The study was approved by The College of Health, Medicine and Life Sciences Research Ethics Committee at Brunel University London. The review reference number of the ethics application submitted via Brunel Research Ethics Online (BREO) is 47992-MHR-Jun/2024- 51654-3.All participants gave their informed consent to take part in the study, after reading a detailed Participant Information Sheet.
: Not applicable.
: DB is Director of Research at The Bikeability Trust. Part of his remit is to find evidence for the effectiveness of Bikeability cycle training, and so he has a vested interest in positive findings in this regard. To mitigate potential bias, data were collected remotely, with no direct contact with participants by the research team except for the purpose of verifying response authenticity. Additionally, anonymised raw data downloaded from the JISC survey platform have been made available on Mendeley Data (see Supplementary Materials). Data from all 276 survey submissions, including those that were removed prior to analysis, are shown in this dataset.