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Abstract

Effective experience design requires not only a knowledge of tourist goals, but an understanding of how these can be met in a particular tourism site. Research on experiences and experience design is supported by cognitive psychology concepts such as perception, attention, appraisal, emotion, consciousness, feelings and memory. However, these concepts are often used in a combination with others from sociology, social or environmental psychology in a manner that leads to confusion rather than clarity, without apparent understanding of the theoretical mechanisms by which these concepts are related. This chapter develops a series of propositions for potential application to tourism experience design. Future research should examine the efficacy of these propositions from cognitive psychology for tourism experience design.

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Citation

Scott, N., Moyle, B., Ma, J., Campos, A.C., I-Ling Chen, L., Le, D., Skavronskaya, L., Li, S., Zhang, R., Jiang, S., Gao, L. and Hadinejad, A. (2024), "Experience Design", Cognitive Psychology and Tourism (Tourism Social Science Series, Vol. 27), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 179-195. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1571-504320240000027015

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024 Noel Scott, Brent Moyle, Ana Cláudia Campos, Liubov Skavronskaya and Biqiang Liu. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited