Combining attitude theory and segmentation analysis to understand travel mode choice at a national park
- 1 April 2015
- journal article
- Published by Elsevier in Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism
- Vol. 9, 17-25
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jort.2015.03.003
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
Funding Information
- the Western Transportation Institute
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tourism and the smartphone app: capabilities, emerging practice and scope in the travel domainCurrent Issues in Tourism, 2012
- Transportation and recreation: a case study of visitors driving for pleasure at Acadia National ParkJournal of Transport Geography, 2008
- Attitude-Based Target Groups to Reduce the Ecological Impact of Daily Mobility BehaviorEnvironment and Behavior, 2008
- ‘Complacent Car Addicts’ or ‘Aspiring Environmentalists’? Identifying travel behaviour segments using attitude theoryTransport Policy, 2005
- The Convergence of Transportation, Information Technology, and Visitor Experience at Acadia National ParkJournal of Travel Research, 2004
- Choice of Travel Mode in the Theory of Planned Behavior: The Roles of Past Behavior, Habit, and Reasoned ActionBasic and Applied Social Psychology, 2003
- Agency culture, cumulative causation and development in Glacier National Park, MontanaJournal of Historical Geography, 1999
- The theory of planned behaviorOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1991
- Estimating Nonresponse Bias in Mail SurveysJournal of Marketing Research, 1977
- The People and the Park: Reactions to a System of Public Transportation in Mt. McKinley National Park, AlaskaJournal of Leisure Research, 1975