Submitted Successfully!
To reward your contribution, here is a gift for you: A free trial for our video production service.
Thank you for your contribution! You can also upload a video entry or images related to this topic.
Version Summary Created by Modification Content Size Created at Operation
1 -- 1513 2024-01-10 22:19:47 |
2 format correct Meta information modification 1513 2024-01-11 12:15:12 |

Video Upload Options

Do you have a full video?

Confirm

Are you sure to Delete?
Cite
If you have any further questions, please contact Encyclopedia Editorial Office.
Osiako, P.O.; Szente, V. Behavioral Intention in Heritage Tourism. Encyclopedia. Available online: https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/53706 (accessed on 01 July 2024).
Osiako PO, Szente V. Behavioral Intention in Heritage Tourism. Encyclopedia. Available at: https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/53706. Accessed July 01, 2024.
Osiako, Peter Onyonje, Viktória Szente. "Behavioral Intention in Heritage Tourism" Encyclopedia, https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/53706 (accessed July 01, 2024).
Osiako, P.O., & Szente, V. (2024, January 10). Behavioral Intention in Heritage Tourism. In Encyclopedia. https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/53706
Osiako, Peter Onyonje and Viktória Szente. "Behavioral Intention in Heritage Tourism." Encyclopedia. Web. 10 January, 2024.
Behavioral Intention in Heritage Tourism
Edit

Heritage tourism involves traveling to destinations of historical importance where historic events occurred, and places where interesting and significant cultures stand out. It is perhaps the oldest form of tourism in the world and continues to dominate the tourism industry in many parts of the world. To meet and satisfy ever-growing tourism demand, destinations need to develop new but sustainable products from the available resources and in critical consideration of market trends. The need to investigate the antecedents of tourist behavioral intentions and its relations with the preceding factors has attracted the attention of many researchers. The extended Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) is used to explore these factors.

heritage tourism destinations behavioral intention theory of planned behavior

1. The Theory of Planned Behavior in Heritage Tourism

The TPB was developed as an extension of the Theory of Reasoned Action (TRA) [1]. Into this theory, Ajzen added a construct referred to as “perceived behavioral control” (PBC) as a determining factor for both behavioral intention and the behavior itself. While the earlier theory (TRA) comprised attitudes and subjective norms, TPB introduced and added the concept of perceived behavioral control (PBC), which was originally defined as an individual’s perception of the ease or difficulty of performing a particular behavior [2]. PBC is thus deemed influential in determining whether the individual will engage in the behavior or not. The inclusion of this variable has been found to increase accuracy in predicting behavior that is not under volitional control [3].
Based on the TPB, intentions for (willingness to perform) a behavior are determined by three variables. The first variable is attitudes, which constitute an individual’s overall evaluation of behavior. The second variable is subjective norms, which consist of a person’s beliefs about whether significant others think he/she should engage in the behavior. The third variable measures the extent to which the individual perceives that the behavior is under their personal control and is labeled PBC. Ajzen [1] and Madden et al. [3] reported empirical evidence that PBC significantly improves predictions of both intentions and behavior. Hence, the evidence is broadly supportive of the TPB in helping to understand and predict behaviors, including travel and tourism behavior.
In the TPB, intention is the immediate precursor of behavior, and is assumed to be based on attitude toward the behavior, perceived social pressure or subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control. A significant number of empirical researchers in tourism have shown that the TPB efficaciously predicts tourist behavior in various tourism contexts [4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]. However, the TPB does not take into account some important variables, such as the motivation that initiates tourists’ behavior in visiting places, and other perceptual factors. Therefore, the current study added motivation and perceived safety and security factors to study their individual and collective roles in tourists’ visit behavior.
The intention of tourists’ consumption behavior is regarded as an important research topic in tourism [14]. Travel intention denotes an individual’s commitment to travel or intent to travel. It can be viewed as an outcome of a psychological process that leads to transforming travel motivation into behavior, thus, a travel action. Jang et al. [15] noted that only limited empirical research has previously attempted to investigate the role of intention in the travel motivation–behavior relationship, leaving intention as one of the least researched areas of tourism. Iso-Ahola [16] associated leisure behavior with attitude, while Qu and Ping [17] assessed the link between the intention of Hong Kong residents to undertake cruise tours and their motivation. In both cases, a positive relationship was established. Shim et al. [18] also conducted a study and found that a more positive tourists’ affective attitude corresponded to a stronger intention towards future travel. Separately, Hennessey et al. [19] attributed the intention to travel to two major elements of tourism marketing: responses to advertising and the respondent’s use of official tourism websites.
The above studies suggest that travel intention may be influenced by multiple factors, including motivations, attitude, and promotion. Beldad and Hegner [20] have noted that new explorations continue to be focused on understanding how demographic characteristics, motivation, and cultural factors can also influence intention. The theory of planned behavior (TPB) introduced later by Ajzen [1] added the third predictor of behavioral intention to the TRA, calling it perceived behavioral control (PBC). This theoretical context has been applied in the understanding of travel intention as a kind of behavioral intention. It is, therefore, clear that in the psychology of human behavior, behavioral intention is widely acknowledged as the immediate antecedent to behavior, including travel behavior.
Attitude refers to “the degree to which a person has a favorable or unfavorable evaluation or appraisal of the behavior in question” [1] (p. 188). In consumer studies, it is described as the enduring, one-dimensional summary evaluation of a product or brand that is assumed to energize buying behavior [21]. Following the “principle of compatibility” [22], attitudes predict behavior. Ajzen and Fishbein [23] viewed attitude as a disposition to respond with some degree of favorableness or unfavorableness to a psychological object. According to them, attitudes are expected to predict and explain human behavior through behavioral intention, whereby positive attitudes should predispose approach tendencies, whereas negative attitudes should predispose avoidance tendencies. Travel attitude has been found to impact on tourists’ intention to visit [24][25]. In applying this to consumer behavior studies, attitude and beliefs are also responsible for brand images formed in buyers’ minds that affect their buying behavior [26].
Subjective norms are beliefs about the normative expectations of others that tend to exert perceived social pressure on an individual to have tendencies towards behaving, or actually behaving, in a certain manner [1]. This construct is widely considered in studies that apply the TPB, including travel and tourism research, for example [27][28][29][30][31][32]. However, some earlier tourism studies that followed the TPB model have found subjective norms not to have significant impact on leisure-related visit intention [29][30].
Perceived behavioral control denotes how people perceive the easiness or difficulty of performing a behavior of interest [1]. This factor is responsible for enabling or disabling the execution of behavioral goals. Many studies have supported the view that behavioral intention is produced from a combination of attitude toward the behavior, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control (for example, [33][34]). According to TPB, the more favorable a person’s attitude is towards a behavior and subjective norms, and the greater the perceived behavioral control, the stronger that person’s intention will be to perform the behavior in question [33]. Therefore, the more people are able to have control over the opportunities and resources they have to perform a specific behavior, the more likely they will engage in such a behavior.

2. Modifying TPB by Extension

The accuracy of the predictive ability of TPB for many different behaviors has been supported by many studies [35]. However, some other studies recommend adding more predictors to the theory, in order to increase its explanatory ability [36][37][38][39]. Therefore, this research integrated the additional factors of motivation and perceived safety and security into the proposed model, used to examine willingness to visit historical heritage sites. By integrating these additional variables into the TPB, the explanatory power of predicting visit behavioral intention was expected to improve, without significantly affecting the three original TPB constructs, as explained below.
Motivation is one of the significant research topics covered in a number of studies in tourism research [40][41][42]. Most of these studies recognize the dynamism and heterogeneous nature of client motivation by considering tourist activities and individual personality relationships. Some authors, like [43], believe that, due to the dynamic concept of motivation, there is a possibility of identifying different tourist profiles based on these variables. Based on the social psychology point of view, the motives that compel a person to make a certain decision are closely connected to expectations which may result in great personal satisfaction [44]. Interestingly, literature on the choice behavior of tourists also indicates that motivation and “need” are interrelated [45]. They argue that tourists are attentive to stimuli that satisfy their desires and ignore stimuli that are not relevant to satisfaction of their desires and needs. Hsu and Huang [28] pointed to a paucity of research relating motivations and intentions to visiting tourist destinations and went ahead to discover that motivation had a positive influence on intention. 
The protection motivation theory (PMT) [46] proposed a modified version of expectancy-value theories, focusing on risk perception and change of intention. The theory postulates three crucial components of fear appeal: (i) the magnitude of the noxiousness of an environment; (ii) the probability of an event’s occurrence; and (iii) the efficacy of a protective response. Protective motivation arises from these three components of fear appeal. Travel-related risks include, but are not limited to, cultural and language difficulties, natural disasters, terrorism, political instability, hygiene, diseases, crime and accidents, and environmental quality [47][48]. In relation to tourism, Sonmez and Graefe [49] established that an increase in cases of aviation accidents, crime, and terrorist activities represented danger and prompted careful selection of safe destinations, taking extra precautions while traveling to risky destinations, or canceling travel plans, among tourists. Destinations perceived as risky by potential tourists are avoided for those they consider safe. Buigut [50] has shown that terrorism has indeed significantly affected tourist arrivals and tourism earnings in Kenya. 

References

  1. Ajzen, I. The theory of planned behavior. Organ. Behav. Hum. Decis. Process 1991, 50, 179–211.
  2. Ajzen, I. Attitudes, traits, and actions: Dispositional prediction of behavior in personality and social psychology. Adv. Exp. Soc. Psychol. 1987, 20, 1–63.
  3. Ajzen, I.; Madden, T.J. Prediction of goal-directed behavior: Attitudes, intentions, and perceived behavioral control. J. Exp. Soc. Psychol. 1986, 22, 453–474.
  4. Ashraf, M.S.; Hou, F.; Kim, W.G.; Ahmad, W.; Ashraf, R.U. Modeling tourists’ visiting intentions toward ecofriendly destinations: Implications for sustainable tourism operators. Bus. Strategy Environ. 2020, 29, 54–71.
  5. Hsieh, C.M.; Park, S.H.; McNally, R. Application of the Extended Theory of Planned Behavior to Intention to Travel to Japan among Taiwanese Youth: Investigating the Moderating Effect of Past Visit Experience. J. Travel Tour. Mark. 2016, 33, 717–729.
  6. Hu, H.; Zhang, J.; Wang, C.; Yu, P.; Chu, G. What influences tourists’ intention to participate in the Zero Litter Initiative in mountainous tourism areas: A case study of Huangshan National Park, China. Sci. Total Environ. 2019, 657, 1127–1137.
  7. Jordan, E.J.; Bynum Boley, B.; Knollenberg, W.; Kline, C. Predictors of intention to travel to Cuba across three time horizons: An application of the theory of planned behavior. J. Travel Res. 2018, 57, 981–993.
  8. Juschten, M.; Jiricka-Pürrer, A.; Unbehaun, W.; Hössinger, R. The mountains are calling! An extended TPB model for understanding metropolitan residents’ intentions to visit nearby alpine destinations in summer. Tour. Manag. 2019, 75, 293–306.
  9. Li, Y.; Luo, F. A review of the application of planned behavior theory in domestic tourism behavior. Tour. Overv. 2018, 5, 20.
  10. Qiu, H. Developing an extended theory of planned behavior model to predict outbound tourists’ civilization tourism behavioral intention. Tour. Trib. 2017, 32, 75–85.
  11. Ramamonjiarivelo, Z.; Martin, D.S.; Martin, W.S. The determinants of medical tourism intentions: Applying the theory of planned behavior. Health Mark. Q. 2015, 32, 165–179.
  12. Seow, A.N.; Choong, Y.O.; Moorthy, K.; Chan, L.M. Intention to visit Malaysia for medical tourism using the antecedents of Theory of Planned Behaviour: A predictive model. Int. J. Tour. Res. 2017, 19, 383–393.
  13. Song, H.; Lyu, X.; Jiang, Y. The effects of characteristics of tourists on Chinese outbound tourism destination choice behavior: An empirical study based on TPB model. Tour. Trib. 2016, 31, 33–43.
  14. Dolnicar, S.; Coltman, T.; Sharma, R. Do satisfied tourists really intend to come back? Three concerns with empirical studies of the link between satisfaction and behavioral intention. J. Travel Res. 2015, 54, 152–178.
  15. Jang, S.; Bai, B.; Hu, C.; Wu, C.-M.E. Affect, travel motivation, and travel intention: A senior market. J. Hosp. Tour. Res. 2009, 33, 51–73.
  16. Iso-Ahola, S.E. The Social Psychology of Leisure and Recreation; W.C. Brown Co. Publishers: Dubuque, Iowa, 1980.
  17. Qu, H.; Ping, E.W.Y. A service performance model of Hong Kong cruise travelers’ motivation factors and satisfaction. Tour. Manag. 1999, 20, 237–244.
  18. Shim, S.; Gehrt, K.C.; Siek, M. Attitude and behavior regarding pleasure travel among mature consumers: A socialization perspective. J. Travel Tour. Mark. 2005, 18, 69–81.
  19. Hennessey, S.M.; Yun, D.; MacDonald, R.; MacEachern, M. The effects of advertising awareness and media form on travel intentions. J. Hosp. Mark. Manag. 2010, 19, 217–243.
  20. Beldad, A.; Hegner, S. Determinants of fair trade product purchase intention of Dutch consumers according to the extended theory of planned behaviour: The moderating role of gender. J. Consum. Policy 2018, 41, 191–210.
  21. Spears, N.; Singh, S.N. Measuring attitude toward the brand and purchase intentions. J. Curr. Issues Res. Advert. 2004, 26, 53–66.
  22. Ajzen, I.; Fishbein, M. Attitude-behavior relations: A theoretical analysis and review of empirical research. Psychol. Bull. 1977, 84, 888.
  23. Ajzen, I.; Fishbein, M. Attitudes and the attitude-behavior relation: Reasoned and automatic processes. Eur. Rev. Soc. Psychol. 2000, 11, 1–33.
  24. Ajzen, I. From Intentions to Actions: A Theory of Planned Behavior. In Action-Control: From Cognition to Behavior; Kuhl, J., Beckmann, J., Eds.; Springer-Verlag: Heidelberg, Germany, 1985; pp. 11–39.
  25. Quintal, V.A.; Lee, J.A.; Soutar, G.N. Risk, uncertainty and the theory of planned behavior: A tourism example. Tour. Manag. 2010, 31, 797–805.
  26. Wijaya, S.; Wahyudi, W.; Kusuma, C.B.; Sugianto, E. Travel motivation of Indonesian seniors in choosing destination overseas. Int. J. Cult. Tour. Hosp. Res. 2018, 12, 185–197.
  27. Macovei, O.I. Applying the theory of planned behavior in predicting proenvironmental behaviour: The case of energy conservation. Acta Univ. Danubius. Acon. 2015, 11, 15–32.
  28. Hsu, C.H.; Huang, S. An extension of the theory of planned behavior model for tourists. J. Hosp. Tour. Res. 2012, 36, 390–417.
  29. Sparks, B. Planning a wine tourism vacation? Factors that help to predict tourist behavioral intentions. Tour. Manag. 2007, 28, 1180–1192.
  30. Shen, S.; Schüttemeyer, A.; Braun, B. Visitors’ intention to visit world cultural heritage sites: An empirical study of Suzhou, China. J. Travel Tour. Mark. 2009, 26, 722–734.
  31. Yamada, N.; Fu, Y.Y. Using the theory of planned behavior to identify beliefs underlying visiting the Indiana State Museum. J. Travel Tour. Mark. 2012, 29, 119.
  32. Wu, G.-M.; Chen, S.-R.; Xu, Y.-H. Generativity and inheritance: Understanding Generation Z’s intention to participate in cultural heritage tourism. J. Herit. Tour. 2023, 18, 465–482.
  33. Ajzen, I. Constructing a TPB Questionnaire: Conceptual and Methodological Considerations. 2006. Available online: https://people.umass.edu/aizen/pdf/tpb.measurement.pdf (accessed on 10 July 2023).
  34. Kan, M.P.H.; Fabrigar, L.R. Theory of planned behavior. In Encyclopedia of Personality and Individual Differences; Zeigler-Hill, V., Shackelford, T., Eds.; Springer: Cham, Switzerland, 2017; pp. 1–8.
  35. Hagger, M.S.; Chatzisarantis, N.; Biddle, S.J.H.; Orbell, S. Antecedents of children’s physical activity intentions and behaviour: Predictive validity and longitudinal effects. Psychol. Health 2001, 16, 391–407.
  36. Chen, M.F.; Tung, P.J. Developing an extended Theory of Planned Behavior model to predict consumers’ intention to visit green hotels. Int. J. Hosp. Manag. 2014, 36, 221–230.
  37. Yousafzai, S.Y.; Foxall, G.R.; Pallister, J.G. Explaining Internet Banking Behavior: Theory of Reasoned Action, Theory of Planned Behavior, or Technology Acceptance Model? J. Appl. Soc. Psychol. 2010, 40, 1172–1202.
  38. Sun, W. Toward a theory of ethical consumer intention formation: Re-extending the theory of planned behavior. AMS Rev. 2020, 10, 260–278.
  39. Foon, P.Y.; Ganesan, Y.; Iranmanesh, M.; Foroughi, B. Understanding the behavioural intention to dispose of unused medicines: An extension of the theory of planned behaviour. Environ. Sci. Pollut. Res. 2020, 27, 28030–28041.
  40. Schuckert, M.; Liu, X.; Law, R. Reseñas en línea sobre hotelería y turismo: Tendencias recientes y direcciones futuras. J. Travel Tour. Mark. 2015, 32, 608–621.
  41. Pratminingsih, S.A.; Rudatin, C.L.; Rimenta, T. Roles of motivation and destination image in predicting tourist revisit intention: A case of Bandung-Indonesia. Int. J. Innov. Manag. Technol. 2014, 5, 19–24.
  42. Pesonen, J.; Komppula, R.; Kronenberg, C.; Peters, M. Understanding the relationship between push and pull motivations in rural tourism. Tour. Rev. 2011, 66, 32–49.
  43. Zschocke, M. Perspectives on Travelling and Identity: Activating Self-Concepts According to Different Cultural Contexts Title. J. Tour. Serv. 2013, 4, 51–74.
  44. Van Vuuren, C.; Slabbert, E. Travel motivations and behaviour of tourists to a South African resort. Tour. Manag. Stud. 2012, 1, 295–304.
  45. Correia, A.; Kozak, M.; Ferradeira, J. Das motivações turísticas à satisfação do turista. Int. J. Cult. Tour. Hosp. Res. 2013, 7, 411–424.
  46. Qi, C.X.; Gibson, H.J.; Zhang, J.J. Perceptions of risk and travel intentions: The case of China and the Beijing Olympic Games. J. Sport Tour. 2009, 14, 43–67.
  47. Abraham, V.; Pizam, A.; Medeiros, M. The impact of attitudes, motivational factors, and emotions on the image of a dark tourism site and the desire of the victims’ descendants to visit it. J. Herit. Tour. 2022, 17, 264–282.
  48. Becken, S.; Jin, X.; Chen, Z.; Gao, J. Urban air pollution in China: Risk perceptions and destination image. J. Sustain. Tour. 2016, 25, 130–147.
  49. Sonmez, S.F.; Graefe, A.R. International vacation decisions and terrorism risk. Ann. Tour. Res. 1998, 25, 112–144.
  50. Buigut, S. Effect of terrorism on demand for tourism in Kenya: A comparative analysis. Tour. Hosp. Res. 2018, 18, 28–37.
More
Information
Subjects: Management
Contributors MDPI registered users' name will be linked to their SciProfiles pages. To register with us, please refer to https://encyclopedia.pub/register : ,
View Times: 182
Revisions: 2 times (View History)
Update Date: 11 Jan 2024
1000/1000
Video Production Service