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This study provides an assessment of methods used in existing tourism research to measure emotion and discusses the potential for use of psychophysiological methods such as electro-dermal analysis, facial muscle activity, heart rate response, eye-tracking system and vascular measures. Psychophysiological measurement techniques have been reported in the marketing, advertising and media literature; however, to the best knowledge of the authors, no studies are reported in the tourism literature. Instead, studies of emotion in the tourism literature invariably employ self-report questionnaire methods which capture only tourists' high-order emotions and are subject to a variety of forms of bias. Unconscious emotional responses that can provide unbiased portrayal of individuals' initial emotional reactions when exposed to a stimulus have been largely ignored. The paper concludes that studies combining both self-report and psychophysiological measures are needed and areas for future research are discussed.
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Shanshi Li
Xiamen University
Noel Scott
Edith Cowan University
Gabrielle Walters
The University of Queensland
Current Issues in Tourism
The University of Queensland
Griffith University
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Li et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1108606f378c85fcf33130 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/13683500.2014.975679