- Travel surveys gather socio-economic, demographic, and trip-making data from households and individuals to inform transportation planning. The author analyzes a 1996 survey of 1668 households and 18000 individuals. - The author explores whether females travel further than males using an exponential distribution and Monte Carlo sampling. Results show females have a 52.3% probability of traveling further. - Other questions examine which activities are more common for each gender given distance traveled, and which activities each gender is more likely to do at different ages.