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Danni Zheng

Bio: Danni Zheng is an academic researcher from University of Queensland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tourism & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 12 publications receiving 186 citations. Previous affiliations of Danni Zheng include Sun Yat-sen University & Fudan University.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors explored what trigger the public's pandemic "travel fear" and how people impose self-protection, coping and resilience related to travel and found that travel fear can evoke different coping strategies, which increases people's psychological resilience and adoption of cautious travel behaviors.

372 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore how people impose trust, fear and perceived threat in postpandemic epidemics, and how public trust plays a vital role in a public health crisis, drawing on trust and protection motivation theories.
Abstract: Public trust plays a vital role in a public health crisis. Drawing on trust and protection motivation theories, the study explores how people impose trust, fear and perceived threat in postpandemic...

57 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors identified the causes and consequences of resident emotions toward Tourism Performing Arts (TPA) developments across urban and rural communities based on a quota sampling method, surveys of 438 and 435 residents were undertaken in two typical urban (Hangzhou) and rural (Yangshuo) TPA destinations in China.

53 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: While residents' perceptions of tourism development have been widely explored through a rational cost-benefit lens, little is known about residents' emotional responses and their influences on resi... as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: While residents’ perceptions of tourism development have been widely explored through a rational cost-benefit lens, little is known about residents’ emotional responses and their influences on resi...

35 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper examined resident reactions to tourism by their perceptions of perceived impacts, overlooking individual emotional responses that might be elicited by psychological causes such as psychological causes, and found that residents react to tourists' perceived impacts with different emotional responses.
Abstract: Abundant literature has examined resident reactions to tourism by their perceptions of perceived impacts, overlooking individual emotional responses that might be elicited by psychological causes t...

33 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors explored what trigger the public's pandemic "travel fear" and how people impose self-protection, coping and resilience related to travel and found that travel fear can evoke different coping strategies, which increases people's psychological resilience and adoption of cautious travel behaviors.

372 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Nov 2021
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the consequences and settings of the COVID-19 pandemic and how innovation and change can contribute to the tourism industry's revival to the next normal, and determine that tourism enterprises and scholars must consider and change the basic principles, main assumptions and organizational situations related to research and practice framework through rebuilding and establishing the tourism sector.
Abstract: The study stipulates phases to observe the proposed mechanism in formulating the travel and leisure industry's recovery strategies. The present pandemic COVID-19 has resulted in global challenges, economic and healthcare crises, and posed spillover impacts on the global industries, including tourism and travel that the major contributor to the service industry worldwide. The tourism and leisure industry has faced the COVID-19 tourism impacts hardest-hit and lies among the most damaged global industries. The leisure and internal tourism indicated a steep decline amounting to 2.86 trillion US dollars, which quantified more than 50% revenue losses. In the first step, the study explores the consequences and settings of the COVID-19 pandemic and how innovation and change can contribute to the tourism industry's revival to the next normal. Thus, the study determines that tourism enterprises and scholars must consider and change the basic principles, main assumptions, and organizational situations related to research and practice framework through rebuilding and establishing the tourism sector. In the second step, the study discusses direct COVID-19 tourism impacts, attitudes, and practices in gaining the leisure industry's boom and recovery. In the third phase, the study proposes to observe the characteristics and COVID-19 tourism consequences on the travel and tourism research. The findings provide insights in regaining the tourism industry's operational activities and offer helpful suggestions to government officials, scholars, and tourism firms to reinvest in the tourism industry to set it back to a normal position.

249 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Das Thema „coronavirus disease 2019“ (COVID-19)mussnichtmehreingeführt werden, wie es sich wahrscheinlich niemand – weder innerhalb noch außerhalb der Medizin – je hätte vorstellen können, benötigen wir viel Zeit.
Abstract: Das Thema „coronavirus disease 2019“ (COVID-19)mussnichtmehreingeführt werden. Es ist allgegenwärtig in einer Art und Weise, wie es sich wahrscheinlich niemand – weder innerhalb noch außerhalb der Medizin – je hätte vorstellen können. Täglich bekommen wir durch öffentliche und wissenschaftliche Medien Informationen zum Virus. Alle diese Meldungen sind selbst für medizinisches Fachpersonal schwierig einzuordnen und führen zu Unsicherheiten. Erschwerend kommt hinzu, dass mittlerweile auch Fake News ihren Weg in die sozialenMedien gefundenhabenund sich „viral“ verbreiten. Um diesen Zustrom von Informationen sinnvoll einzuordnen, relevante von weniger relevanten, irrelevanten Fakten oder gar mutwilligen Falschmeldungen zu trennenund soSicherheit bei denMitarbeiterinnen und Mitarbeitern im Gesundheitssystem zu schaffen, benötigen wir viel Zeit. Diese Zeit fehlt mittlerweile vielerorts. Mehr denn je ist es daher gerade jetzt wichtig, gut recherchierte, kompakt zusammengefasste und gutachterlich geprüfte Informationen zu dieser „neuen“Viruserkrankungzubekommen. Der Beitrag „COVID-19: update für Anästhesisten und Intensivmediziner März 2020“ von D.Thomas-Rüddel et al. bietet genau das! Er vermittelt in übersichtlicher und fundierter Weise all das, was wir aktuell über die Symptomatik, Diagnostik, Hygienemaßnahmen und Therapie der Coronaviruserkrankung wissen. Gleichzeitig weist der Beitrag auf eindrücklicheWeise darauf hin, dass diese Pandemie neben den medizinischen v. a. auch logistisch-organisatorische Herausforderungen in ungekannter Dimension mit sich bringt. Hier gilt es vorausschauend, Ressourcen zu generieren, ausreichend Schutzausrüstung zu beschaffen, Personal vorzubereiten sowie Störungen im klinischen Ablauf vorauszusehen und zu beseitigen.

232 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of social media on customer brand engagement (CBE) and their consequent impact on co-creation and revisit intention in pandemic environment were investigated. And the authors also examined the moderation impact of fear of COVID-19 and perceived risk on associations between social media, CBE, and cocreation/revisit intention, thus further contributing to existing literature.
Abstract: Applying protection motivation theory, the purpose of this study is to investigate the effects of social media on customer brand engagement (CBE) and their consequent impact on co-creation and revisit intention in pandemic environment. This study also examines the moderation impact of fear of COVID-19 and perceived risk on associations between social media, CBE, and co-creation/revisit intention, thus further contributing to existing literature. Partial least squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) was adopted to examine the data collected from key tourism-destinations in Jammu/Kashmir. The findings propose that social media positively and significantly effects the CBE, which subsequently affects co-creation and revisit intention in COVID-19 times. Second, findings found that CBE's positive impact on co-creation and revisit intention. Third, findings indicated the social media's indirect effect on co-creation and revisit intention, as mediated via CBE. Thus, social media's effect on co-creation and revisit intention are more prominent under elevated CBE in pandemics. Finally, fear of COVID-19 and perceived risk negatively moderates the linkage between social media, CBE, and co-creation/revisit intention. This study concludes with key implications arising from the analyses and further research opportunities.

134 citations