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Tourism analysis : an interdisciplinary journal. Vol. 5 (2000), No. 2-4
Inv. br.: č2000/094-2-4
Introduction: reports from the second Symposium on the consumer psychology of tourism, hospitality and leisure (CPTHL), 67.
Assessing the role of consumers in the measurement of destination competitiveness and sustainability, 69-76.
Investigating cognitive distance and long-haul destinations, 83-90.
The impact of seemingly minor methodological changes on estimates of travel and correcting bias, 91-96.
A review of choice modeling research in tourism, hospitality, and leisure, 97-104.
Qualitative comparative analysis of travel and tourism purchase-consumption systems, 105-111.
Representing and predicting tourist choice behavior: a rule-based vs. a utility-based approach, 113-118.
Two means to the same end: hierarchical value maps in tourism - comparing the association pattern technique with direct importance rating, 119-123.
Informaqtion sourcing by Swiss travelers: a market segmentation approach, 125-130.
Tourism as an escape: long-term travelers in New Zealand, 131-136.
Employing Internet technology to investigate and purchase travel services: a comparison of x'ers, boomers, and mature market segments, 137-143.
Determining leisure preferences: demographics or personality?, 145-149.
A new psychographic segmentation method using Jungian MBTI variables in the tourism industry, 151-156.
K-means vs. topology representing networks: comparing ease of use for gaining optimal results with reference to data input order, 157-162.
Behavioral market segmentation using the bagged clustering approach based on binary guest survey data: exploring and visualizing unobserved heterogeneity, 163-170.
Mastering unobserved heterogeneity in tourist behavior research, 171-176.
Consuming culture: the case of the cultural tour route, 177-182.
Evaluating castlefield urban heritage park from the consumer perspective: destination attribute importance, visitor perception, and satisfaction, 183-189.
A critical review of approaches to measure satisfaction with tourist destinations, 191-196.
A review of comparison standards used in service quality and customer satisfaction studies: emerging issues for hospitality and tourism research, 197-202.
The antecedents and consequences of vacationers' dis/satisfaction: tales from the field, 203-209.