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Author

Rosmaliza Muhammad

Other affiliations: Chandka Medical College
Bio: Rosmaliza Muhammad is an academic researcher from Universiti Teknologi MARA. The author has contributed to research in topics: Malay & Foodways. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 43 publications receiving 247 citations. Previous affiliations of Rosmaliza Muhammad include Chandka Medical College.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Observation, be a helper, received instruction and task from the mothers are the modes of transmission in Malay families which influenced their practices.

59 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In order to prevent food borne illnesses, mobile food owners need to access and improve operator's knowledge, personal hygiene and the hygiene practices on food safety to consumer.

47 citations

Posted Content
01 Jan 2011
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the effect of the factors influencing the perception of price fairness on customer response behaviors and found that the experience that customer gained throughout their stay in the hotel positively influenced their response behaviors while knowledge that customers obtained pertaining to room rates negatively influence their response behaviours.
Abstract: With the intense rivalry in hotel industry globally and to increase their competitive advantage, most hotels operators are implementing revenue management concept or yield management to maximize sales and revenues. Revenue management is the ability of the hotel to sell the right product to the right customer at the right time with the right price through the right distribution channels. The concept was initiated and successfully implemented in the early 1990s by the airlines companies which then being adapted by most hotels since both industries have similar characteristics. Those characteristics are the ability to segment the markets, perishable inventory, product sold in advance, fluctuating demand, low marginal sales costs, and high marginal production costs. In implementing the concept, hotel operators need to maximize the room rates when the demand is high and to maximize the room sales when the demand is low. However, such practices often leads to unfairness issues that could jeopardize the relationship between the hotels and the customers and perception of price fairness is believed associated well with the customer response behaviors. This study empirically investigates the effect of the factors influencing the perception of price fairness on customer response behaviors. Four factors were being tested namely, a) treatment experience, b) price knowledge, c) price expectation, and d) price information. Using self-reported questionnaire survey among the four and five star hotel customers some meaningful insights on the issues investigated were obtained. Findings revealed the experience that customer gained throughout their staying in the hotel positively influence their response behaviors while knowledge that customers obtained pertaining to room rates negatively influence their response behaviors. Customer perceptions and judgments of price unfairness however will lead to negative emotional response like no action, self-protection, and revenge. These results not only provide the hotel operators in understanding of the customers’ behaviors but way to implement an effective revenue management in their operation.

28 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Purchasing food ingredients, making an observation, hands-on cooking, regular practices, attending ceremonial events and consume the Malay traditional food were the behaviour that's been identified in introducing and passing the Malaysian traditional food knowledge to the younger generations.

17 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that most of the older generation and young generation concern about preserving the Malay traditional food.

15 citations


Cited by
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01 Jan 2009

3,235 citations

01 Jan 2008
TL;DR: By J. Biggs and C. Tang, Maidenhead, England; Open University Press, 2007.
Abstract: by J. Biggs and C. Tang, Maidenhead, England, Open University Press, 2007, 360 pp., £29.99, ISBN-13: 978-0-335-22126-4

938 citations

01 Jan 2010
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the patterns and effects of departmental oversight across 28 ministries in Estonia, Hungary, Poland and Slovenia in relation to transposition planning, legal review and monitoring of deadlines.
Abstract: The extent to which member states transpose EU directives in a timely fashion is often argued to be strongly associated with the general effectiveness of national bureaucracies. But what kind of institutional solutions ensure better performance? This paper examines the patterns and effects of departmental oversight across 28 ministries in Estonia, Hungary, Poland and Slovenia. In mapping the strength of oversight, it relies on around 90 structured interviews regarding the rules-in-use on transposition planning, legal review and monitoring of deadlines. The analysis of the impact of departmental oversight is based on an original dataset of over 300 directives with transposition deadlines between January 2005 and December 2008.

858 citations