Title of article
Predicting Travel Attitudes Among University Faculty After 9/11
Author/Authors
STAATS، SARA نويسنده , , PANEK، PAUL E. نويسنده , , COSMAR، DAVID نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
-120
From page
121
To page
0
Abstract
The authors interviewed a random sample of 306 university faculty as part of an annual university poll. Items focused on air travel concerns following 9/11, positive aspects of travel, and future travel intentions. Demographic factors were not significant predictors for men or women faculty. Faculty expressed positive attitudes toward travel, for example agreeing that travel allows them to demonstrate competency. Concerns about missing connections and delays elicited a larger percent of negative reactions than concerns about hijackings or security. Gender differences were not observed on individual items, but in regression analyses a composite of self-reported travel risk factors was more predictive of future travel plans for women than for men, although women expected to travel as much in the future as men. The results are consistent with positive psychology and speak to applied aspects of travel and tourism.
Keywords
positive psychology , risk , GENDER , travel
Journal title
THE JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY (INTERDISCIPLINANRY AND APPLIED)
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
THE JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY (INTERDISCIPLINANRY AND APPLIED)
Record number
117212
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