A Study on Tourists’ Experiences Satisfaction and Loyalty based on the Segmented Groups of Destination Cognitive and Affective Value

2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 205-221
Author(s):  
Rae-Heon Song
Keyword(s):  
2012 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 227-236 ◽  
Author(s):  
Agata Wytykowska

In Strelau’s theory of temperament (RTT), there are four types of temperament, differentiated according to low vs. high stimulation processing capacity and to the level of their internal harmonization. The type of temperament is considered harmonized when the constellation of all temperamental traits is internally matched to the need for stimulation, which is related to effectiveness of stimulation processing. In nonharmonized temperamental structure, an internal mismatch is observed which is linked to ineffectiveness of stimulation processing. The three studies presented here investigated the relationship between temperamental structures and the strategies of categorization. Results revealed that subjects with harmonized structures efficiently control the level of stimulation stemming from the cognitive activity, independent of the affective value of situation. The pattern of results attained for subjects with nonharmonized structures was more ambiguous: They were as good as subjects with harmonized structures at adjusting the way of information processing to their stimulation processing capacities, but they also proved to be more responsive to the affective character of stimulation (positive or negative mood).


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-26
Author(s):  
Teresa Pratt

Abstract This article argues for a focus on affect in sociolinguistic style. I integrate recent scholarship on affective practice (Wetherell 2015) and the circulation of affective value (Ahmed 2004b) in order to situate the linguistic and bodily semiotics of affect as components of stylistic practice. At a Bay Area public arts high school, ideologically distinct affects of chill or high-energy are co-constructed across signs and subjects. I analyze a group of cisgender young men's use of creaky voice quality, speech rate, and bodily hexis in enacting and circulating these affective values. Crucially, affect co-constructs students’ positioning within the high school political economy (as college-bound or not, artistically driven or not), highlighting the ideological motivations of stylistic practice. Building on recent scholarship, I propose that a more thorough consideration of affect can deepen our understanding of meaning-making as it occurs in everyday interaction in institutional settings. (Affect, political economy, embodiment, bricolage, voice quality, speech rate, high school)


2005 ◽  
Vol 97 (3) ◽  
pp. 810-818
Author(s):  
Takashi Nakao ◽  
Makoto Miyatani

We investigated whether affective integration increases the speed of processing of personality trait knowledge. The fan effect was compared between cases where trait knowledge is stored with the affective value and cases where it is not stored with the affective value. 18 college students first memorized a set of traits about fictitious individuals and then made recognition judgments. In the 2 × 2 factorial repeated-measures design, the number of traits learned about a fictitious individual and whether those traits were integrated by a shared affective value were manipulated. The significant interaction showed that knowledge of personality trait with affective integration was processed quickly even if the particular person's memory had rich connections with traits.


Psicologia ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 71-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hélder Vinagreiro Alves ◽  
Mariana Mello Breyner ◽  
Sí­lvia Fontinha Nunes ◽  
Bruno Diogo Pereira ◽  
Luí­s Filipe Silva ◽  
...  

Non-victims who express high versus low personal belief in a just world (PBJW) are judged as having more social value, both social utility (i.e., market value) and social desirability (i.e., affective value). Our goal was to test whether this pattern differed when the targets were presented as innocent or non-innocent victims of enduring suffering. A hundred and eighty-six participants of both sexes took part in our 2 (degree of PBJW expressed: high/low) X 3 (Target identity: innocent victim/ non-innocent victim/ non-victim) between-subjects experimental study. Participants rated the targets on four measures: positive/negative social utility/desirability. Targets were judged more positively and less negatively if they expressed high versus low PBJW, regardless of their being non-victims or (non-)innocent victims. This pattern is taken as further evidence that the expression of high PBJW is a judgment norm, that is, a socially valued discourse irrespective of it being true or untrue.


Author(s):  
Robert Lowe ◽  
Alexander Almér ◽  
Gustaf Lindblad ◽  
Pierre Gander ◽  
John Michael ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Bogdan Popa

In this chapter I show that queer genealogy helps us rethink nineteenth-century feminist activism. By drawing on Judith Butler and Jacques Rancière’s ideas, I develop a conception of queer genealogy that mobilizes the performativity of shame to identify practices that challenge the police. The method of queer genealogy illuminates Mill’s unconventional relationship with Harriet Taylor as a creative intervention that disrupted Victorian sexual norms. In developing a genealogical method, I draw on Mill’s concept of experiments in living, which points to the sexual and affective value of relationships that take place outside marriage. Also, I investigate Mill’s use of silence as a politician and his deployment of humiliating language to resignify the shame associated with his sexual and political transgressions.


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