4.5 Article

Weibo users and Academia?s foci on tourism safety: Implications from institutional differences and digital divide

Journal

HELIYON
Volume 9, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2022.e12306

Keywords

Tourism safety; Web of science; Weibo; Bibliometrics; Comparative analysis; Artificial intelligence; Digital divide; Information asymmetry

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Tourism safety is crucial for both tourists and practitioners in the industry. This study used bibliometric analysis to examine articles on tourism safety published in 2018 on the Web of Science (WoS), as well as analyzed Weibo posts from 1977 to 2022. The findings showed that there has been a consistent increase in the number of publications on tourism safety on WoS, while government agencies in popular tourism destinations were the most active on Weibo. The study also identified important topics and keywords, with a focus on health and IT terminologies.
Tourism safety is essential for tourists and tourism practitioners. This study conducted a biblio-metric analysis using VOSviewer and CiteSpace for 2018 articles indexed on the Web of Science (WoS). It also analysed 7293 Weibo posts between 1977 and 2022 using Python, MYSQL, AI sentiment, and Tableau. The first tourism safety publication on WoS appeared in 1977, while the first Weibo microblog dated was dated back to 2011. Compared to the information posted on Weibo, the annual publications about tourism safety on WoS recorded a stable increment. On Web of Science (WoS), the academic staff and universities produced the largest number of tourism safety posts. On the flip side, the most productive organisations on Weibo are government agencies in popular tourism destinations. Accident, medical tourism, environment, mediating role, and hospitality were important burst nodes in tourism safety on WoS. Quality, accident, and health-related words were the foci on both Weibo and WoS. On Web of Science, the top 10 most popular keywords of tourism safety-related articles could be classified into two groups: health (Covid-19, restoration, pandemics, Sars-Cov-2, Sars, mental health) and IT terminologies (big data, artificial intelligence). It has been concluded that artificial intelligence (AI) is more likely to be included in the keywords on tourism researched by academia. In contrast, the public may not know about or use AI in the tourism industry. Be-sides, the top 10 most popular keywords on Weibo related to tourism risks and hazards were drowning and traffic risks and hazards, such as drowning and traffic risks. The digital divide may explain such a difference: the academic circle benefits more from the digital age than laypersons. It may also be the result of institutional differences and information asymmetry.

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