The Interplay of Context, Experience, and Emotion at World Heritage Sites: a Qualitative and Machine Learning Approach
This study illustrates how user-generated content, posted in the form of heritage site reviews on social media, can serve to reveal the relationship between the cocreated interpretation of World Heritage Sites (WHSs)—in terms of values, tangible and intangible attributes, as well
as site visit logistics—and the emotional experience of the site. Two WHSs are taken as a case study. More than 2,000 reviews were retrieved from TripAdvisor and analyzed through the application of a mixed method that integrates qualitative digital ethnography and machine learning. Results
show that TripAdvisor reviews capture tourists' emotional reactions from personal encounters with heritage and provide insights into the range of values—including the social, historic, and aesthetical values—that visitors experience when engaging with aspects of the past to associate
meanings for the present. Results also show that the relation between experiences gained at WHSs and contextual aspects is not linear; instead, it is a complex one that results from the interaction of different factors and their associated sentiments. We discuss our results by reflecting on
their theoretical and practical implications.
Keywords: HERITAGE VALUES; MACHINE LEARNING; USER-GENERATED CONTENT; VISITORS' EXPERIENCE; WORLD HERITAGE
Document Type: Research Article
Affiliations: 1: School of Architecture and Design, Lebanese American University, Beirut, Lebanon 2: Adnan Kassar School of Business, Lebanese American University, Beirut, Lebanon 3: Department on Architectural Engineering and Technology, Delft University of Technology, Delft, Netherlands
Publication date: December 27, 2022
This article was made available online on October 27, 2021 as a Fast Track article with title: "THE INTERPLAY OF CONTEXT, EXPERIENCE, AND EMOTION AT WORLD HERITAGE SITES: A QUALITATIVE AND MACHINE LEARNING APPROACH".
- Tourism, Culture & Communication is international in its scope and will place no restrictions upon the range of cultural identities covered, other than the need to relate to tourism and hospitality. The Journal seeks to provide interdisciplinary perspectives in areas of interest that may branch away from traditionally recognized national and indigenous cultures, for example, cultural attitudes toward the management of tourists with disabilities, gender aspects of tourism, sport tourism, or age-specific tourism.
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