Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Bart R. van der Meer, Michel A. C. van den Hoven, John van der Kamp, Geert J. P. Savelsbergh
Summary: This study examined the effect of self-controlled video feedback on the learning of tactical motor skills in tennis, and found that the self-controlled group showed significantly greater improvements in tactical performance compared to the yoked group. These improvements were not influenced by learners' self-efficacy and self-regulative skills.
RESEARCH QUARTERLY FOR EXERCISE AND SPORT
(2023)
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Danilo Gomes de Arruda, Fabio Barp, Greysian Felisberto, Claudio Tkak, Jeffrey B. Wagman, Thomas A. Stoffregen
Summary: This study explored the perception of affordances for different types of serves among youth volleyball players. The results showed that the More Experienced group had a higher proportion of successful serves, particularly for sideline serves. Additionally, the minimum servable gap size was larger for short serves compared to sideline serves.
RESEARCH QUARTERLY FOR EXERCISE AND SPORT
(2023)
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Zachary Beldon, Joseph T. Walker
Summary: This study assesses the impact of coaching behaviors on the development of sportspersonship behaviors in college athletes and evaluates the impact of those behaviors on students' intent to return to the institution.
RECREATIONAL SPORTS JOURNAL
(2023)
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Alexandru Dimache
Summary: This article discusses the necessity and challenges of adopting research methods such as Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) in tourism academia. Using McWha et al.'s study as an example, it highlights the violation of IPA's core principles and methodological guidelines. This article emphasizes the importance of researchers, reviewers, editors, and publishers paying attention to excessively adapting or ignoring the foundational elements of IPA.
CURRENT ISSUES IN TOURISM
(2023)
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
David Boto-Garcia
Summary: This study uses a large longitudinal data set and ordered probit models to explore the role of the serial order of destinations in multi-destination trips on tourist satisfaction. The findings show that tourists tend to be highly satisfied with destinations visited later in their trip. The study also finds that factors such as length of stay, age, and travel party size mediate the relationship between the serial order of the trip and satisfaction.
CURRENT ISSUES IN TOURISM
(2023)
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Jinyi Xu, Guanghui Qiao, Songhe Hou
Summary: This study aims to investigate the factors influencing users' intention to seek travel information on short video platforms. The results show that the technological affordances on short video platforms are positively related to users' diverse perceptions in seeking travel information. Perceived enjoyment, usefulness, and ease of use also have an impact on users' intention. This study provides important theoretical and practical insights into increasing users' intention to use short video platforms as a travel information source.
CURRENT ISSUES IN TOURISM
(2023)
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Juan Wang, Kexin Wang, Xuanwen Ding
Summary: Overseas investment and tourism economy development play important roles in the inclusive growth of small island developing states (SIDS). China's FDI to SIDS can effectively promote SIDS' inclusive growth, while tourism economic growth is influenced by threshold effects and regional types.
CURRENT ISSUES IN TOURISM
(2023)
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Filippo Marchesani
Summary: The relationship between digital advancement and tourists has a positive impact on urban development and tourism demands, but it also exhibits an inverted U-shaped curve effect.
CURRENT ISSUES IN TOURISM
(2023)
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Mirian Vaz Valerio, Gustavo Zaccaria Schaun, Luana Siqueira Andrade, Gabriela Barreto David, Rafael Bueno Orcy, Airton Jose Rombaldi, Cristine Lima Alberton
Summary: The present study examined the effects of acute caffeine supplementation on performance during resistance training alone or in combination with aerobic training. The results showed that caffeine supplementation was not effective in minimizing the interference effect of aerobic training on strength performance. However, it did improve strength performance during the first set of both aerobic and resistance training sessions.
RESEARCH QUARTERLY FOR EXERCISE AND SPORT
(2023)
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Susanna Rampichini, Eloisa Limonta, Matteo Zago, Angela Valentina Bisconti, Filippo Bertozzi, Emiliano Ce, Marta Borrelli, Chiarella Sforza, Fabio Esposito
Summary: This study evaluated the ability of heart rate to estimate oxygen uptake during 5-meter shuttle running at different speeds. The results showed that heart rate underestimated oxygen uptake at 50% MAS, but returned accurate values at higher speeds, albeit with high variability.
RESEARCH QUARTERLY FOR EXERCISE AND SPORT
(2023)
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Ojonugwa Usman, Andrew Adewale Alola
Summary: This study evaluates the effectiveness of environmental taxes in mitigating the effect of tourism on environmental performance in EU-28 countries. The findings indicate that the effect of tourism on environmental performance is dependent on the level of environmental taxes.
CURRENT ISSUES IN TOURISM
(2023)
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Jiamin Liu, Xi Li, Ling Zhang, Qian Lu, Xinwei Su
Summary: Psychological ownership is found to have a positive impact on cultural tourism, with authenticity being an important factor influencing psychological ownership and tourist commitment. Cognitive and behavioral cultural intelligence moderates the relationship between authenticity and psychological ownership. Stimulus need satisfaction is identified as one of the motivations driving psychological ownership.
CURRENT ISSUES IN TOURISM
(2023)
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Rachel Dodds, Mark Robert Holmes
Summary: This study finds that a person's everyday behavior at home does influence their sustainable travel behavior and propensity to pay. Those who are more altruistic and environmentally minded are more likely to engage in sustainable travel and seek local experiences, while those who are more frugal are less likely to engage in sustainable travel.
TOURISM AND HOSPITALITY RESEARCH
(2023)
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
K. C. Anup, Jeffrey C. Hallo, Lauren N. Duffy, Aby Sene-Harper, Brijesh Thapa
Summary: Despite the negative impact of COVID-19, community-based homestay facilities continue to play a vital role in sustaining rural livelihood. This study conducted online interviews with homestay owners, coordinators, and policymakers throughout Nepal to assess the potential, challenges, and policies regarding domestic tourism in CBHs. The findings revealed that CBHs initially focused on attracting domestic guests due to the high potential of domestic tourism during international travel restrictions. Domestic guests consider homestays as a place to learn about local culture and enjoy traditional food and hospitality. However, the number of guests has decreased primarily due to COVID-19 and secondarily due to road problems, tourism attractions, and publicity issues. Policy measures such as providing special weekend leave, official homestay visits for government employees, and promotional offers are recommended to attract domestic guests.
CURRENT ISSUES IN TOURISM
(2023)
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Linsi He, Dallen J. Timothy
Summary: This study examines museum visitors/tourists' perceptions of 'cultural and creative products' in China, and explores the influence of place and other factors on their purchase decisions. The results show that most tourists realize the importance of place representation in souvenirs and call for more creativity and uniqueness in the industry.
JOURNAL OF TOURISM AND CULTURAL CHANGE
(2023)
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Septi Fahmi Choirisa
Summary: Hotel employees faced significant challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic, with multidimensional work stressors becoming a common issue for hotel management. This study analyzed data from hotel employees in Indonesia and found that multidimensional work stressors have a significant impact on organizational commitment. Organizational commitment positively affects employee job performance and subjective well-being, while negatively affecting turnover intention. However, organizational commitment does not mediate the relationship between multidimensional occupational stressors and employee-related behavior.
JOURNAL OF QUALITY ASSURANCE IN HOSPITALITY & TOURISM
(2023)
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Ning Kang, Yan Feng, Jiayin Lin
Summary: This study aims to investigate the factors influencing the behavioral intentions of glampers and their effects on word-of-mouth (WOM) about glamping by introducing a stimulus-organism-response (SOR) framework. By analyzing data collected from questionnaires, the study provides empirical evidence and theoretical support for the development of the glamping industry in China and understanding Chinese glampers' needs.
JOURNAL OF CHINA TOURISM RESEARCH
(2023)
Article
Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
Anke Peters, Matthias Fuchs
Summary: In the face of the ecological crisis, understanding the relationships between humans and nature is crucial, especially in protected areas. This study classifies individuals into four environmental value groups and examines their perception of access restrictions in a Swedish nature reserve. The findings highlight significant differences in how visitors with varying environmental values perceive these restrictions.
JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE TOURISM
(2023)
Article
Economics
Lijun Ma, Cong Liu, Yong Zhan
Summary: This study investigates the impact of smart city construction on destination tourism efficiency, analyzing the impact paths and mechanisms from the aspects of technological innovation, informatization, and industrial structure upgrading. The results show that smart city construction can significantly improve destination tourism efficiency and the impact varies spatially.
Article
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Christopher A. Craig
Summary: This study investigates the impact of climate on tourism using the Great Barrier Reef in Australia as a case study. The results show that the weather favorability at the Great Barrier Reef is high and has improved over time due to climate change. Past tourism participation and climate can predict travel decisions, and the climate favorability in summer and spring seasons is valuable to tourism performance.
TOURISM RECREATION RESEARCH
(2023)