M
Martin Joseph Gannon
Researcher at Edinburgh Napier University
Publications - 45
Citations - 1122
Martin Joseph Gannon is an academic researcher from Edinburgh Napier University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tourism & Context (language use). The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 39 publications receiving 608 citations. Previous affiliations of Martin Joseph Gannon include University of Strathclyde & University of Edinburgh.
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Assessing the Mediating Role of Residents’ Perceptions toward Tourism Development:
TL;DR: In this article, the mediating role of residents' perceptions of tourism impacts is investigated in the context of social exchange theory and Weber's theory of substantive and formal rationality, and the authors examine the effect of tourists' perceptions on tourism impacts.
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Festival quality, self-connection, and bragging
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated how experiential purchase quality influences experience self-connection and braggart word-of-mouth, for both first-time and repeat visitors, using a mixed-method approach.
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Does living in the vicinity of heritage tourism sites influence residents' perceptions and attitudes?
S. Mostafa Rasoolimanesh,Babak Taheri,Martin Joseph Gannon,Ali Vafaei-Zadeh,Haniruzila Hanifah +4 more
TL;DR: The authors investigated whether the perceptions and attitudes of residents living within the vicinity of heritage tourism sites differ from those living further afield, and examined residents' attit- ing attit...
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Understanding the importance that consumers attach to social media sharing (ISMS): Scale development and validation
TL;DR: In this article, the authors use a rigorous multi-step scale development procedure to create a scale centered on understanding the importance consumers attach to social media sharing (ISMS) from a tourists' perspective.
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Understanding the influence of airport servicescape on traveler dissatisfaction and misbehavior
TL;DR: In this article, the influence of social and physical services on international travelers' dissatisfaction and misbehavior differs between two cultures, namely, Hong Kong and Singapore, and the authors investigated whether the influence was different between the two cultures.