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A cross-cultural anatomy of destination image: An application of mixed-methods of UGC and survey Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-03-21 Jin-Soo Lee, Sangwon Park
The destination competitiveness literature builds on many studies that measure destination competitiveness using determinant factors or attributes, focusing specifically on attributes that influence tourism destination competitiveness. However, these studies overlook the critical destination tourism issue of extreme dependence on a particular country. Extreme dependence on a certain source market is
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Celebrity endorsement in tourism: Attention, emotional arousal and familiarity Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-03-21 Biqiang Liu, Brent Moyle, Anna Kralj, Yaoqi Li
Celebrity endorsement in tourism is utilised by global marketing practitioners to attract tourists to visit destinations. Despite this, studies are yet to assess the efficacy of two specific types of celebrity endorsement, a celebrity from the host country (host celebrity) vs. a celebrity from the country-of-origin (origin celebrity). Utilising the match-up hypothesis, this research applied a quasi-experimental
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Managerial response strategies to eWOM: A framework and research agenda for webcare Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-03-20 Ana Isabel Lopes, Nathalie Dens, Patrick De Pelsmacker, Edward C. Malthouse
Managers increasingly address client feedback online, a practice known as webcare. Based on a systematic literature review on webcare, we provide a framework that aims to identify potential generalizations, discuss possible explanations for inconsistencies that require further investigation, and identify the under-researched areas concerning the managerial responses to eWOM (electronic Word-of-Mouth)
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The ‘magic of filter’ effect: Examining value co-destruction of social media photos in destination marketing Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-03-20 Chaowu Xie, Jun Yu, Songshan (Sam) Huang, Kun Zhang, Die Ou Yang
Excessive filter processing of social media photos may cause viewers to question the authenticity of the photos. From the value co-destruction perspective, this research examines the effect of photo filtering on consumer perceptions. Study 1 ran content analysis of 2035 social media user posts and identified that destination marketing failure caused by filtered photos is a process involving tourists'
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Welcome back: Repeat visitation and tourist wellbeing Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-03-15 Sera Vada, Sebastian Filep, Brent Moyle, Sarah Gardiner, Jovanie Tuguinay
Although repeat visitation is professed as a desirable phenomenon in studies on destination loyalty, there is limited explicit consideration of well-being as a psychological outcome for repeat visitors. Consequently, this research explores the intersection between repeat visitation and the well-being of repeat visitors to Fiji. Drawing from in-depth semi-structured interviews, findings highlight the
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Do customers exhibit engagement behaviors in AI environments? The role of psychological benefits and technology readiness Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-03-08 Dexiang Yin, Minglong Li, Hailian Qiu
Although service environments have become increasingly smart due to the infusion of artificial intelligence (AI) technology, little research has examined AI environments and their influence on customer behaviors. This research investigated this issue in the context of services. We explored the direct effects of AI environments (compared with the traditional environment) on customer engagement, the
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A supplier side view of digital nomadism: The case of destination Gran Canaria Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-03-01 Olga Hannonen, Teresa Aguiar Quintana, Xinran Y. Lehto
Digital nomadism is a rapidly growing lifestyle for living and working. Despite its potential transformative effect on destinations, little attention has been paid to destination communities in which digital nomads reside. This paper aims to examine the interface between the destination communities and digital nomadism: how the stakeholders in a destination community perceive and accommodate digital
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Effects of price sorting display on extreme option choice aversion: The role of ease of comparison in multiple option displays Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-02-18 Jungkeun Kim, Seongseop (Sam) Kim, Jihoon Jhang, Jaeseok Lee, Chulmo Koo
Due to the popularity of online travel agency (OTA) booking platforms, OTAs display diverse information, including features of products, on their websites. Based on choice architecture literature, this study aimed to examine the effect of product quality and price sorting (vs. non-sorting) on extreme option choice aversion and identify the moderating effect of displays that made it difficult to read
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The impact of employee-oriented CSR on quality of life: Evidence from the hospitality industry Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-02-11 Manuel González-De-la-Rosa, Yaiza Armas-Cruz, Daniel Dorta-Afonso, Francisco J. García-Rodríguez
This paper builds on recent corporate social responsibility (CSR) literature and on stakeholder theory. Our aim is to analyze the direct and indirect effects of employee-oriented CSR on hotel workers' quality of life (QoL). Based on survey collected from a sample of hotel employees in the Canary Islands (Spain), relationships were empirically examined through partial least square structural equation
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The role of public space in constructing experience capital: A longitudinal analysis in the hotel context Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-02-10 Laurie Wu, Peng Liu, Dung Le
Public space plays a primary role in shaping customers' hospitality experiences. Yet how public space conditions customers' experiential outcomes in accumulating capital for hospitality organizations remains underexplored. Inspired by the theory of psychological ownership, this research presents an in-depth analysis of the impacts of customers' public space experiences on their experiential outcomes
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The pricing of European airbnb listings during the pandemic: A difference-in-differences approach employing COVID-19 response strategies as a continuous treatment Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-02-06 Francesco Luigi Milone, Ulrich Gunter, Bozana Zekan
The COVID-19 pandemic has been a major shock to the global tourism industry. Given its peculiarity, this paper analyzes one of the most intriguing questions in the Airbnb literature – the pricing of Airbnb listings – by taking advantage of a difference-in-differences methodology that largely draws on variations in country-level policy responses to the pandemic. Relying on a dataset containing weekly
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Postcolonial ambivalence as per the tourist Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-02-01
This article aims to understand the ways in which ambivalence toward postcolonial mimetic places is exposed in touristic consumption. This article is a single case study investigating Bà Nà Hills, which was initially constructed by the French colonialists and afterwards developed into an entertainment park in Vietnam. Ethnographic research by using face-to-face techniques such as in-depth interviewing
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Impact of decomposition on time series bagging forecasting performance Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-02-02
Time series bagging has been deemed an effective way to improve unstable modelling procedures and subsequent forecasting accuracy. However, the literature has paid little attention to decomposition in time series bagging. This study investigates the impacts of various decomposition methods on bagging forecasting performance. Eight popular decomposition approaches are incorporated into the time series
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Keep it real: Assessing destination image congruence and its impact on tourist experience evaluations Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-02-01
Inaccurate promotional information about tourist destinations may result in tourists' negative evaluations. This study proposes a new approach to measure the congruence between projected and received images of a destination's attractions. Based on online textual data, this study investigates how image congruence influences tourists' evaluations of their destination experiences. Using promotional messages
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A comparative study of eight COVID-19 protective measures and their impact on Swiss tourists’ travel intentions Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-01-25 Andreas Philippe Hüsser, Timo Ohnmacht
A comparative vignette-based experimental survey design incorporating various socio-psychological factors, linked to the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB), the Health Belief Model (HBM) and the Domain-Specific Risk-Taking scale (DOSPERT) was carried out to test variations in eight travel-related COVID-19 protective measures on Swiss tourists’ travel intentions. Among the tested measures, vaccination
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Urban sensory map: How do tourists “sense” a destination spatially? Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-01-19 Huahua Li, Mimi Li, Huixia Zou, Yi Zhang, Jingjing Cao
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Metaverse as a disruptive technology revolutionising tourism management and marketing Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-01-17 Dimitrios Buhalis, Daniel Leung, Michael Lin
Metaverse is the next disruptive technology that will impact society in the coming decades, by enabling immersive experiences in both virtual and physical environments. Although still conceptual, Metaverse converges the physical and digital universe, allowing users to seamlessly traverse between them. Digital immersion offers opportunities for people to travel in time, supporting users to experience
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The why, how, and what of public policy implications of tourism and hospitality research Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-01-17 Herman Aguinis, Sascha Kraus, Jasna Poček, Natanya Meyer, Søren H. Jensen
We synthesized policy implications of tourism and hospitality research by reviewing 12,269 articles published in 10 leading journals from 2011 to 2021. The most common rationale for policies (i.e., the why) is market failure, while the most typical role of policies (i.e., the how) is to create incentives. In addition, policies are typically hybrid and include suggestions for formal and informal institutional
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Identifying a destination’s optimal tourist market mix: Does a superior portfolio model exist? Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-01-16 Marcello Mariani, Emmanouil Platanakis, Dimitrios Stafylas, Charles Sutcliffe
Extant tourism research has used various portfolio model types to determine optimal tourist market mixes which simultaneously maximize total tourist expenditure and minimise the instability of international inbound tourism demand. We analyse the three portfolio models that have been applied in the tourism literature: two varieties of a levels model (that use the level of tourist arrivals, or bed nights
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Abusive supervision and emotional labour on a daily basis: The role of employee mindfulness Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-01-05 Yitong Yu, Shi Tracy Xu, Gang Li
This study examined the relationships between abusive supervision, subordinates' work engagement and their emotional labour on a daily basis. Based on an experience sampling study of 95 frontline hospitality employees over 10 working days, the results revealed the complex consequences of abusive supervision on subordinates in the hospitality industry. The results showed that daily abusive supervision
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Can gamification improve the virtual reality tourism experience? Analyzing the mediating role of tourism fatigue Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-01-08 Zhenda Wei, Jingru Zhang, Xiaoting Huang, Hanqin Qiu
Although virtual reality (VR) technology has been increasingly applied in the tourism industry, improving the VR experience of tourists remains a challenge. Based on two studies, this paper examines how gamification can improve the VR tourism experience through reducing tourism fatigue. Study 1 explores the relationship between gamification, tourism fatigue, and tourist satisfaction. The results show
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Research on user-generated photos in tourism and hospitality: A systematic review and way forward Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-01-06 Hengyun Li, Lingyan Zhang, Cathy H.C. Hsu
Visual content has become an integral component of consumers' experience sharing. People increasingly search for visual content posted by others prior to making purchase decisions. This work adopts a systematic review methodology to examine user-generated photo–related tourism and hospitality research published in academic journals between 2006 and 2021 by topics, methods, and theoretical underpinnings
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Analyzing travel mobility patterns in city destinations: Implications for destination design Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-01-06 Sangwon Park, Jinyan Zu, Yang Xu, Fan Zhang, Yu Liu, Jingyan Li
Understanding the features of travel activities is important in elaborating travel behaviors and segmenting travelers based on the similarity of activity patterns. This research applying mobile big data analytics suggests a novel method to classify travelers by considering the sequences of travel activity with individuals' trajectories. The result revealed five distinct travel types visiting city destinations
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When users decide to bypass collaborative consumption platforms: The interplay of economic benefit, perceived risk, and perceived enjoyment Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-01-03 Stephanie Nguyen, Sylvie Llosa
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HARNESSING ROMANCE: The effect of exposure to romance-themed attractions on tourists’ impulsive buying Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2023-01-05 Xiaoyan Luo, Lisa C. Wan, Xing Stella Liu
Storytelling is considered an effective way to promote a tourist attraction. Developing a strong theme for stories is beneficial to the persuasiveness of storytelling. In the current research, we explore the effect of a pervasive but understudied theme of storytelling in tourism practice—romance—on tourists' propensity to engage in impulsive buying. In three experimental studies and an implicit association
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The role of affinity and animosity on solidarity with Ukraine and hospitality outcomes Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-12-29 Alexander Josiassen, Florian Kock, A. George Assaf, Adiyukh Berbekova
The tourism and hospitality industry has had to make some hard decisions during the year 2022. Many major hotel chains have had to decide whether to stay or pull out of Russia, and which policies to implement toward individual Russian guests at their hotels outside of Russia. This study investigates solidarity as an important factor to understanding the conflict and its ramifications for the hospitality
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A process perspective on experience co-creation: How pre-trip involvement prompts destination loyalty Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-12-22 Limei Cao, Dengming Xie, Ying Qu
Although the existing literature has suggested that tourists' experience co-creation during or after trips benefits destination loyalty, knowledge of how pre-trip behavior impacts future behavioral intention from a process perspective is limited. To address the gaps, we develop a logic chain linking past behavior, cognition, emotion, and future behavioral intention under a stage-by-stage process of
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Relationship quality matters: How restaurant businesses can optimize complaint management Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-12-20 Lars Meyer-Waarden, William Sabadie
This research investigates the effectiveness of complaint management according to company–client relationship quality (RQ). Interactional recovery efforts are critical for efficient complaint management in the hospitality management (restaurant) context; this study addresses the potential compensatory interaction effects of interactional recovery efforts (personal apology vs. impersonal apology via
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Service robots and perceived discrimination in tourism and hospitality Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-12-19 Faruk Seyitoğlu, Stanislav Ivanov
This study explores the influences of the incorporation of service robots in the service delivery systems of tourism and hospitality companies on the perceived discrimination of tourists and tourism employees. In doing so, a conceptual framework is proposed to explain the relationships between robots-based service delivery systems in tourism and hospitality (e.g., fully robotised and mixed service
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Attitudes not set in stone: Existential crises changing residents’ irritation Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-12-13 Sarah Schönherr, Bernhard Fabian Bichler, Birgit Pikkemaat
This study discusses the application of Doxey's irritation index in the face of existential crises. Building on the COVID-19 pandemic, data was collected at two time points (prior to the crisis and after the first wave). Our two sequences of data show that residents' attitudes are by no means fixed, with perceptions of overcrowding bouncing back and concerns about reduced economic benefits. In an attempt
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The antecedents of digital collaboration through an enhanced digital platform for destination management: A micro-DMO perspective Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-12-09 Husna Zainal-Abidin, Caroline Scarles, Christine Lundberg
While the tourism sector shifts towards digital transformation, Destination Management Organisations (DMOs) often struggle to adapt to their changing technological environment. This study explores the antecedents of digital collaboration and develops a framework for micro-DMOs to enhance effective destination management through digital technologies. An integrated sequential qualitative approach was
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Restaurant survival prediction using customer-generated content: An aspect-based sentiment analysis of online reviews Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-12-07 Hengyun Li, Bruce X.B. Yu, Gang Li, Huicai Gao
Business failure prediction or survival analysis can assist corporate organizations in better understanding their performance and improving decision making. Based on aspect-based sentiment analysis (ABSA), this study investigates the effect of customer-generated content (i.e., online reviews) in predicting restaurant survival using datasets for restaurants in two world famous tourism destinations in
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The interaction effect of emoji and social media content on consumer engagement: A mixed approach on peer-to-peer accommodation brands Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-12-01 Xiaowei Wang, Mingming Cheng, Shanshi Li, Ruochen Jiang
This study examines how the interaction between emoji (emotional vs semantic) and social media content (aesthetic experience vs promotion) influences consumer engagement in tourism brands' digital communication. Based on real Twitter data and an online experiment, our results show that, for aesthetic experience content, emotional emoji elicits more consumer engagement than semantic emoji does. Moreover
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Sentiment mining of online reviews of peer-to-peer accommodations: Customer emotional heterogeneity and its influencing factors Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-12-05 Rui Li, Yong-Quan Li, Wen-Qi Ruan, Shu-Ning Zhang, Mei-Yu Wang
The polarized problem of customers' emotional experiences in peer-to-peer accommodations has been exposed and needs urgent solution. However, a research gap remains in understanding the emotional heterogeneity. Therefore, this study explores customers' emotional heterogeneity and drivers for peer-to-peer accommodations using deep learning technologies and social network analysis. The results reveal
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Infusing new insights: How do review novelty and inconsistency shape the usefulness of online travel reviews? Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-12-05 Xi Zhang, Xiaoxia Zhang, Sai Liang, Yang Yang, Rob Law
Review usefulness represents a vital indicator for evaluating the quality of online reviews in the tourism industry, and various heuristic cues have been recognized as determinants of this indicator. This study constructs a comprehensive conceptual framework based on the heuristic-systematic model to observe how two systematic cues, namely, review novelty and inconsistency, shape the perceived usefulness
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Leader Apology in the Employee–Organization Relationship: The Roles of Subordinate Power Distance Belief and Leader Competence Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-11-28 Xingyu Wang, Xueqi Wen, Zihan Liu, Yuzhuo Jiang, Mingyun Huai
According to the organizational support theory, leaders' words and deeds are not only the products of their own will but also a reflection of organizations' standpoints. We thus focus on leader apology in the case of organizational transgressions and predict that leaders' apologetic acts are likely to influence employees' organization-oriented attitudes and behaviors. Specifically, leader apology is
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From customers' fingertips to employees’ well-being: The impact of mobile application ordering from a job demand-resource perspective Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-11-25 Misun (Sunny) Kim, Melissa A. Baker, Emily Ma
Service is entering a 2.0 transformation where service no longer simply involves customer-employee interactions, but customer-technology-employee interactions. However, previous literature predominantly focuses on customers from a marketing approach, failing to incorporate employees' perspective in the face of technology-enabled changes in a service encounter. Building on Job demand-resource model
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The choice between business travel and video conferencing after COVID-19 – Insights from a choice experiment among frequent travelers Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-11-22 Adrian Müller, Andreas Wittmer
COVID-19 has accelerated the substitution of videoconferencing for business travel. However, little research exists about the decision-making behavior of business travelers considering virtual alternatives. We fill this gap by reconceptualizing the decision-making process and investigating the fundamental choice between face-to-face (FtF) and virtual communication (VC) using an adaptive choice-based
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Can colored sidewalk nudge city tourists to walk? An experimental study of the effect of nudges Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-11-17 Jun Chen, Xinran Lehto, Mark Lehto, Jonathon Day
Physical inactivity has been an increasing sub-health condition. Nudging people to participate in physical activities consequently becomes a public health priority. This study aims to showcase how color as a design factor can work to nudge city travelers to take on walking. Alongside the color effect, this experimental study incorporates another two design factors, namely, priming and social norms
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The impacts of geographic and social influences on review helpfulness perceptions: A social contagion perspective Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-11-17 Long Xia
Identifying and presenting helpful reviews to customers can significantly affect their purchase decisions. Although review helpfulness has been extensively explored in tourism research, extant studies have not sufficiently emphasized the unique characteristics of tourism products and investigated review helpfulness perceptions from both geographic and social influence perspectives. In this study, drawing
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Tourism destination research from 2000 to 2020: A systematic narrative review in conjunction with bibliographic mapping analysis Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-11-10 Huang GuoQiong Ivanka, Karl Marion, Wong IpKin Anthony, Law Rob
Literature reviews serve as cornerstones for advancing the corpus of existing knowledge. This article offers an overview of the evolution of destination studies from 2000 to 2020. The current study first overviews 20 destination review articles and then applies bibliometric algorithms to determine authorships, popular topics, thematic clusters, and structural variations in 1393 destination studies
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A review of tourism and climate change mitigation: The scales, scopes, stakeholders and strategies of carbon management Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-11-10 Stefan Gössling, Martin Balas, Marius Mayer, Ya-Yen Sun
Tourism needs to reduce emissions in line with other economic sectors, if the international community's objective of staying global warming at 1.5°-2.0 °C is to be achieved. This will require the industry to half emissions to 2030, and to reach net-zero by mid-century. Mitigation requires consideration of four dimensions, the Scales, Scopes, Stakeholders and Strategies of carbon management. The paper
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Some stay and some quit: Understanding P2P accommodation providers’ continuous sharing behavior from the perspective of feedback theory Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-11-08 Shuai Chen, Wenjun Chen, Xingwu Luo
Building on feedback theory, this study aims to understand providers' continuous sharing behavior (CSB) by integrating subjective and objective feedback in the context of peer-to-peer (P2P) accommodations. In Study 1, we test a mediation model by using survey data collected from 289 hosts of P2P accommodations. The results show that providers' positive feedback perception (PFP) is positively related
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Optimal targeting of latent tourism demand segments Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-11-09 José M. Cazorla-Artiles, Juan L. Eugenio-Martin
This paper identifies for the first time the optimal target markets employing the latent tourism demand expenditure, a novel concept in tourism literature. The study quantifies latent tourism demand between each pair of origin-destination through distinguishing by type of tourism and seasonality. It works with market shares that are estimated via a fractional regression model. Moreover, latent demand
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The influence of human elements in photographs on tourists' destination perceptions and intentions Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-11-01 Kun Zhang, Jinyi Zhang, Jufeng Yang
Photographs with a human element are powerful in influencing viewers' perceptions and decision-making processes. However, rare quantitative evidence was detected about the best human presenting percentage and how it affects the intention. In this study, we decoded how human elements (presence or absence, low or high proportion) affect viewers' perceptions and intentions in nature/culture-based photographs
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Consumers' responses to hotels’ donation of rooms to homeless people: The impact of political ideology Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-10-27 Sohyun Bae
Our research examines how consumers’ political ideology affects their intention to stay at hotels that have donated rooms to homeless people during the COVID-19 pandemic. We propose that conservative consumers are less likely than liberal ones to stay at hotels that have donated rooms to homeless people due to their greater feelings of disgust toward such hotels. However, we further argue that the
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Food preferences as a proxy for adventurousness Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-10-26 Bob McKercher, Karen Hughes, Mucha Mkono
Food preferences have been demonstrated to be a proxy measure for adventurousness, in general. This study demonstrates that a single variable of food preferences unveils the four dimensions of adventurousness that are applicable in a general tourism context. The findings suggest that adding this simple semantic differential question to visitor surveys can be a powerful tool to evaluate the critical
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How virtual reality moderates daily negative mood spillover among hotel frontline employees: A within-person field experiment Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-10-25 Xi Y. Leung, Xiaolin (Crystal) Shi, Xiaoting Huang
This study explores how virtual reality (VR) interventions mitigate daily negative mood spillover among hotel frontline employees through a daily dairy study. A within-subject field experiment was conducted to collect data from 87 hotel employees over ten consecutive workdays (846 daily responses). The multilevel analysis supports daily negative mood spillover by revealing positive relationships between
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Can craft beverages shape a destination’s image? A cognitive intervention to measure pisco-related resources on conative image Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-10-22 Claudia Gil Arroyo, Carla Barbieri, Whitney Knollenberg, Carol Kline
Assessing potential tourists' perceptions is vital to build a destination image and brand capable to attract new and repeated visitors. The increasing popularity of craft beverage tourism in recent years is incentivizing destinations to (re)design their offerings and (re)brand their image based on their craft beverages. This study investigated how the image of an emerging craft beverage tourism destination
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Peak event: the rise, crisis and potential decline of the Olympic Games and the World Cup Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-10-21 Martin Müller, David Gogishvili, Sven Daniel Wolfe, Christopher Gaffney, Miriam Hug, Annick Leick
This paper tracks the growth of two of the largest tourist events: the Olympic Games and the Football World Cup, drawing on a dataset containing all events between 1964 and 2018. Overall, the size of the three events has grown about 60-fold over the past 50 years, thirteen times faster than world GDP. We identify an S-shaped growth curve and four different growth periods, with an emergent crisis phase
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Recommend or not? The influence of emotions on passengers’ intention of airline recommendation during COVID-19 Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-10-11 Xi Wang, Jie Zheng, Liang(Rebecca) Tang, Yi Luo
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the airline industry has undoubtedly suffered serious losses. Investigation of passenger's intention to recommend an airline is urgently needed for airline companies to formulate specific retention strategies and revitalize the industry. Therefore, this study mainly sought to identify the latent factors that determine airline passenger's recommendation intention during
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‘Moments to be Had’: Understanding The Experience of Memorable Tourism Moments Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-10-13 Gerardo Joel Anaya, Xinran Lehto
Memory research in cognitive science indicates people will come to remember a few fleeting moments from a past tourism experience, but not the entire trip. Accordingly, the goal of this research is to understand the experience of travelers' most ‘Memorable Tourism Moments’. The results from a qualitative inquiry helped develop a conceptualization of the Memorable Tourism Moment as a fleeting temporally
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Dual-branded hotels: Resource-based entry strategies in agglomerated markets Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-10-10 Simone Bianco, Manisha Singal, Florian J. Zach, Juan Luis Nicolau
Despite the growing importance of dual-branded hotels, research on this trend is lacking. This study investigates the effect of resource-based entry strategies for dual-branded hotels vis-à-vis incumbent market competition on performance. Using a hierarchical linear model, we found that best performance is achieved by dual-branded hotels that pursue a diversification strategy by entering the market
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How does self-construal shape tourists' image perceptions of paradox destinations? The mediating roles of cognitive flexibility and destination involvement Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-10-07 Jianan Ma, Fangxuan (Sam) Li
This study proposes the concept of the ‘paradox destination’ as a novel destination positioning strategy for destination marketers. A paradox destination strategy describes the situation where a destination delivers a brand identity with contradictory personalities. Four experiments were conducted to investigate the interactive effects of self-construal (independent vs. interdependent) and destination
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Exploring diversity, equity, and inclusion in hospitality and tourism firms through the organizational justice and stakeholder theories Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-10-03 Jinyoung Im, Yeasun K. Chung, Dazhi (Daisy) Qin
Abstract not available
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Exploring the influence of tourists’ happiness on revisit intention in the context of Traditional Chinese Medicine cultural tourism Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-09-28 Jiamin Peng, Xiaoyun Yang, Senhui Fu, Tzung-Cheng (T.C.) Huan
Based on how tourists interpret the destination experience and on attachment theory, this study investigates the influencing mechanism of tourists' happiness on revisit intention for traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) cultural tourism destinations. Three tourist samples confirm the three dimensions of tourists' happiness: positive emotions, engagement, and meaning. Two surveys were conducted to test
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The spatial and temporal resilience of the tourism and outdoor recreation industries in the United States throughout the COVID-19 pandemic Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-09-27 Eunjung Yang, Jordan W. Smith
Accurately quantifying industry resilience is essential to devising effective recovery strategies. Previous research into industry resilience has either quantified the concept with single metrics aggregated across large geographies (e.g., visitation) or used metrics comparing the relative concentration of an industry within a region to the national average (e.g., location quotients). The former set
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Virtual interviews vs. LinkedIn profiles: Effects on human resource managers’ initial hiring decisions Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-09-21 R.L. Fernando Garcia, Yung-Kuei Huang, Linchi Kwok
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Craving alterreal authenticity through the post-postmodern lens: An experimental inquiry Tour. Manag. (IF 12.879) Pub Date : 2022-09-15 IpKin Anthony Wong, Danni Sun, Xiling Xiong, Xi Li
This research takes a post-postmodern stance to investigate tourists' predisposition toward alterreal authenticity (i.e., altered reality). It draws on Schachter's two-factor theory of emotion to highlight a model that examines the effects of authenticity and cultural difference, and their interactions on cultural-heritage consumption, through a field experiment. Results point to a two-step mechanism