Residents’ attitude and emotional response to Oleotourism: a case study of Extremadura (Spain)

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Elide Di-Clemente ◽  
Ana María Campón-Cerro ◽  
José Antonio Folgado-Fernández ◽  
José Manuel Hernández-Mogollón
Keyword(s):  
2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 35
Author(s):  
Eleni Vakali ◽  
Alexios Brailas

There is a new area flourishing within qualitative research based on methods using all forms of art: music, theatre, visual arts, and literature. In this paper we present an overview of the basic features of arts-based research; emphasizing on their meaning on education research, on the freedom of expression given to the participants in the research, and on the method the researcher applies to evaluate the collected data. We then present an arts-based research case study where the research questions relate to teachers’ reactions to the use of smartphones by students in the classroom. In this case study, teachers, especially those working on secondary education, are invited to portray their thoughts, emotions, and images that respond to these questions by painting them on a paper using markers. The findings show that the majority of the teachers are negative about the children using their smartphone in the classroom, along with evidence for teachers’ emotional response and how to confront the phenomenon.


2014 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 350-353
Author(s):  
Kamalludin Bilal ◽  
Siti Noraza Ali ◽  
Abg Sulaiman Abg Naim ◽  
Nurlaila Ali ◽  
Ismail Ashmat

Stress is a reaction to excessive pressure or harassment at work.  It is a physical, mental, or emotional response to events that cause bodily or mental tension.  People in stress conditions may find it is hard to concentrate on any task and cannot be relied on to do their share.  Some employers assume that stressful working conditions turns up the pressure on workers.  A set aside health concerns; it will affect the productivity and profitability in today’s economy.  This paper purposely to identify the level of job stress among government staffs.  This study was carried out using a set of questionnaire and survey method.  The questionnaire was distributed to 150 staffs of Majlis Amanah Rakyat (MARA) Kuching as representative of government sector and was analysed using SPSS version 19.  The study had shown that most of the respondents were moderately stressful.  It is very important that the organisations understands the needs of its employees and provide what is best for the employees.


2020 ◽  
Vol 84 ◽  
pp. 103955
Author(s):  
Lucía Cassani ◽  
Susana Fiszman ◽  
María V. Alvarez ◽  
María R. Moreira ◽  
Laura Laguna ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Lucia Quinault

This article will explore the ways in which literary forms empower emotional response to public events, using as a case study the wide range of literary texts – published and circulated in manuscript – inspired by the notorious Abergavenny scandal of 1729. Lady Abergavenny’s beauty, adultery and death, followed by a trial in which her husband was awarded a staggering £10,000 in compensation, stimulated poetry, drama and opera, giving voice to desire, remorse, pity, despair and contempt. Drama and poetry intersect in their treatment of the scandal, and while poetry offers its writers and readers an opportunity to explore a single viewpoint, and to circulate it privately, drama re-imagines the causes and conversations, and exposes them to public judgment. The alternating prose and verse of opera thus offer us a self-contained sample of the uses of different literary genres in expressing emotion and presenting the social and moral debates provoked by the affair.


2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 197-207
Author(s):  
Eko Fitrianto ◽  
Islahuddin Daud ◽  
Welly Nailis

Research objective – There are four main types of endorsers that can be used to deliver marketing communications, the types are: celebrities, ordinary people, expert, and corporate president. Each type has its own characteristics and selecting the right type endorser can influence consumer behavior on using productDesign/Metodhology/Approach – There are three factors used to test the effect of endorsers, namely: attractiveness, trustworthiness and expertise. This study is conclusive research by collecting primary data from 100 participants. Each participant was involved is the user of product and knowing every ad starring by endorser that using in this research. We use SEM analysis as technique to examine the effect between types of endorsers and consumer behavior.Findings – There is a different result on each type of endorser and its effect to their consumer behavior. On the attractiveness factor, only CEO type has affected (sign 0.008). While on trustworthiness factor, all factor has affected with expert type has the highest impact (0.016). And last, on the expertise factor, none of type of endorser that influence consumer behavior.Limitation – This research focused on how the consumer responds the ad at convenience goods. In consumer goods, emotional response caused by endorser more possible. Further research needs to explore how the consumer responds to shopping goods.Originality/value – This study compares four different types of endorsers, in which each endorser has its own characteristics, and is associated with consumer behavior


Author(s):  
CJ Reynolds ◽  
Nicholas John

With around 160 videos, 160,000 subscribers, and 18 million views, Cart Narcs is an “elite” YouTube channel. The typical Cart Narcs YouTube video is framed around the idea of shaming people who do not return their shopping carts. The eponymous Narc, Agent Sebastian, patrols grocery store parking lots looking for miscreants to confront and film. When he spots a target, he runs towards them making siren noises. "Cart Narcs!" he shouts. "That's not where the cart goes!" While seemingly related to established entertainment genres featuring real people in everyday situations and to prank videos, we identify significant features in Cart Narcs videos that distinguish them: the lack of a debrief; the positioning of the Cart Narc as the "nice guy" in the interaction; and the Cart Narc’s claim to the moral high ground. These features each remove a redemptive moment present in analogous types of content, resulting in a communicative interaction engineered to anger people. We ask how Agent Sebastian produces such a powerful emotional response to his seemingly innocent request that people return their shopping cart and what the logic of this form of media content might signify. Cart Narcs is a revealing case study in how the economy-driven logic of participation produces undesirable types of content when it overwhelms or wholly replaces social and aesthetic logics. Cart Narcs videos are a hybrid genre concoction that trade people's anger for monetized views, cloaked by the pretense of a social mission.


2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 218-242
Author(s):  
Diana I. Popescu

Holocaust exhibitions are known for their unique iconography, often constructed by means of exhibition design. This article focuses on how visitors construct meaning based on display choices made by exhibitions designers. It presents insights from an audience research study which was conducted with young visitors of The Holocaust Exhibition at the Imperial War Museum in London. It addresses how design choices impact on the visitor’s engagement and understanding of the Holocaust Exhibition. By drawing on visitor comments, this article shows that design plays a significant role in shaping visitors’ understanding of the Holocaust, as well as their level of engagement, focus and emotional response. It further makes several practical suggestions, informed by visitor feedback, regarding the development of new Holocaust exhibition designs.


2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 395-434 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felicity Henderson

This article argues that despite individual Fellows’ interest in artistic practices, and similarities between a philosophical and a connoisseurial appreciation of art, the Royal Society as an institution may have been wary of image-making as a way of conveying knowledge because of the power of images to stir the passions and sway the intellect. Using Robert Hooke as a case study it explores some of the connections between philosophers and makers in Restoration London. It goes on to suggest that some epistemic images were in fact designed to elicit an emotional response in their viewers in order to force them to re-evaluate the subject-matter by presenting it in a new and surprising way.


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