2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.tourman.2017.03.020
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Effects of personification and anthropomorphic tendency on destination attitude and travel intentions

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Cited by 58 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…Building on previous research that suggested personifying destinations with human-like characteristics can result in favorable marketing outcomes (e.g., Ekinci, Sirakaya-Turk, and Baloglu 2007; Letheren, Martin, and Jin 2017; Murphy, Moscardo, and Benckendorff 2007), we proposed and found people can attribute values to destinations in a way that is consistent with the Schwartz (1992) theory of human values. In contrast with the more established trait-based literature on destination personality (e.g., Boksberger et al 2011; Klabi 2012; Usakli and Baloglu 2011), our values-based framework offers researchers a robust and generalizable approach to examining destination personality.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 79%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Building on previous research that suggested personifying destinations with human-like characteristics can result in favorable marketing outcomes (e.g., Ekinci, Sirakaya-Turk, and Baloglu 2007; Letheren, Martin, and Jin 2017; Murphy, Moscardo, and Benckendorff 2007), we proposed and found people can attribute values to destinations in a way that is consistent with the Schwartz (1992) theory of human values. In contrast with the more established trait-based literature on destination personality (e.g., Boksberger et al 2011; Klabi 2012; Usakli and Baloglu 2011), our values-based framework offers researchers a robust and generalizable approach to examining destination personality.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Prior research has suggested that personifying destinations with human-like characteristics can lead to more favorable outcomes than branding based on functional attributes, such as beaches or scenery (Ekinci, Sirakaya-Turk, and Baloglu 2007). Indeed, Marketers view personification as an important way to differentiate similar destinations (Murphy, Moscardo, and Benckendorff 2007; Usakli and Baloglu 2011) and to promote favorable attitudes and travel intentions (Letheren, Martin, and Jin 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The 15 nonanthropomorphic items were not included as they do not measure anthropomorphising. The IDAQ demonstrates good internal consistency(Letheren, Martin, & Jin, 2017) and moderately high reliability(Waytz et al, 2010). Cronbach's alpha was .824, indicating a high level of internal consistency for the current sample.…”
mentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Participants read the scenario and were randomly assigned to the CIC conditions, as in the pretest, then completed a survey that contained the manipulation checks, dependent measures, and three covariates: social network proneness (Ho-Dac, Carson, and Moore 2013), social media credibility (Hautz et al 2014), and destination experience with the Alps. We used a semantic differential scale to measure attitudes toward the destination (Appendix C); many prior studies confirm the viability of measuring attitudes toward an object with such scales (Ajzen 2008; Ferraro, Kirmani, and Matherly 2013; Hsu, Cai, and Li 2010; Huang and Hsu 2009; Jalilvand et al 2012; Lam and Hsu 2006; Letheren, Martin, and Jin 2017; Zarrad and Debabi 2015). In addition, we used 7-point Likert-type scales (1 = strongly disagree and 7 = strongly agree) to measure realistic travel expectations and covariates (Appendix C).…”
Section: Study 1: Mediating Role Of Realistic Travel Expectationsmentioning
confidence: 99%