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Tourism and wellbeing

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors examine the philosophical background of wellbeing from different perspectives and take a closer look at how these frameworks can inform tourism research and practices, and explore the relationship between diverse terminologies and perspectives as well as the ways in which hedonic and eudaimonic wellbeing can be derived through tourism experiences.
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This article is published in Annals of Tourism Research.The article was published on 2017-09-01. It has received 281 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Tourism.

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Market segmentation and travel choice prediction in Spa hotels through TripAdvisor’s online reviews

TL;DR: Findings confirm that the proposed hybrid machine learning methods can be implemented as an incremental recommendation agent for spa hotel/resort segmentation through effectively utilizing ‘big data’ procured from online social media contexts.
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Tourism 4.0 technologies and tourist experiences: a human-centered design perspective

TL;DR: This viewpoint conceptualizes three different effects of interactive system use on technology-mediated tourist experiences—besides goal achievement that impacts satisfaction, effects can be goal-limiting, goal- Surpassing or goal-surpassing, and is used to frame the importance of human-centered design for emerging Tourism 4.0 technologies.
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Mental health rescue effects of women's outdoor tourism: A role in COVID-19 recovery

TL;DR: Commercial outdoor tourism enterprises can contribute powerfully to the wellbeing of women and families, and will be especially valuable for mental health recovery, following deterioration during COVID-19 coronavirus lockdowns worldwide.
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Tourist transformation: Towards a conceptual model

TL;DR: In this article, a tourist transformation model is created, which provides a conceptual foundation for future research, and is relevant for designing and marketing transformative tourism experiences, with consequences on attitude, habits, and behaviour.
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Positive psychology and tourist well-being: A systematic literature review

TL;DR: A systematic review of 82 peer-reviewed articles published in English-language tourism journals indicates that tourist well-being is predominantly examined as a consequence of travel, rather than linked to tourism marketing and management.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Pre-Vacation Time : Blessing or Burden?

TL;DR: In a longitudinal study, 96 Dutch workers reported their health and well-being in the two weeks prior to their winter sports vacation, and health andWell-being decreased significantly from two weeks to one week prior to vacation.
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Does life satisfaction of tourists increase if they set travel goals that have high positive valence

TL;DR: The travel goal valence principle states that life satisfaction of tourists is high when their travel goals are related more to (1) intrinsic than extrinsic motives, (2) abstract than concrete desired states, (3) growth than basic needs, (4) approach of desired states than avoidance of undesired states,(5) deprived than nondeprived needs, and (6) flow than nonflow activities.
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The Impact of Tourism on Quality of Life: a Segmentation Analysis of the Youth Market

TL;DR: In this article, the impact of tourism on the quality of life (QOL) of university students was evaluated using an adapted version of the WHOQOL-Bthis article scale.

Poverty, Social Exclusion and Holidaying: towards developing policy in Ireland

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a Table of Table 1 Table 2 Table 3 Table 4 Table 5 Table 1.1 Table 2.2 Table 3.3 Table 4.2
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Journeys of inspiration: Working artists’ reflections on tourism

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that romantically informed modes of travel are important to working artists and that many working artists adopt anti-tourist perspectives informed by romanticism and based upon temporal, spatial and behavioural touristic distinctions.
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