Index

Contemporary Research Methods in Hospitality and Tourism

ISBN: 978-1-80117-547-0, eISBN: 978-1-80117-546-3

Publication date: 13 April 2022

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

(2022), "Index", Okumus, F., Rasoolimanesh, S.M. and Jahani, S. (Ed.) Contemporary Research Methods in Hospitality and Tourism, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 291-297. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80117-546-320221020

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022 Fevzi Okumus, S. Mostafa Rasoolimanesh and Shiva Jahani. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Abduction
, 14

Abductive Codebook
, 207

Abductive research methodology
, 204–207

Abductive thematic analysis
, 203–206

key challenges and limitations
, 216–217

phases
, 207–211

small business social responsibility in foodservice sector
, 211–216

ABI/Inform Global
, 44

Ableist bias
, 29–30

Abstraction process
, 135

Accreted ethnographers
, 194–195

Action research
, 237–238, 240

in academic research programs
, 242

characteristics
, 238

generating theory through
, 247

implementing
, 244–246

needs
, 242–243

origins and philosophy
, 240

quality in
, 247–248

skills
, 246

in tourism and hospitality research
, 241–242

Agreement
, 149

Amazon’s Mechanical Turk
, 115

American Psychological Association (APA)
, 172

ANOVA
, 119

Answer formats
, 97–99, 106

Assurance procedures
, 209–211

ATLAS
, 145

ATLAS. ti
, 135

Attention check questions
, 78, 86, 89

Augmentative and alternative communication (AAC)
, 29

challenging ableist bias around children using
, 29–30

Axial coding
, 260–262

Bestiality in leisure and tourism
, 30–32

Bibliographic coupling
, 64, 71

Bibliometrics
, 55–56

analysis
, 55–56, 285

bibliographic coupling
, 71

citation and publication structure of scientific field
, 64–65

co-authorship analysis
, 71

co-citation analysis
, 65–71

co-occurrence of author keywords
, 71

documents
, 58–59

indicators
, 62–63

interpretation
, 64–71

leading authors, institutions, and countries
, 65

literature review
, 56–60

methods
, 60–64

most cited documents
, 65

most productive journals
, 65

WoS options
, 61

Binary stability measure
, 97

Bootstrap test
, 119

Bradford’s law
, 56–57

Case studies (CSs)
, 224–226

approach
, 222–228

operationalizing
, 228

research
, 162, 223–224

selecting
, 226–227

CATPAC
, 135

Causal effect
, 119

Chrono ethnography
, 3, 191–192

Citations
, 56–57, 62

per document
, 62

Citavi®
, 46

Classical GT
, 254–257

Co-authorship analysis
, 64, 71

Co-citation analysis
, 63, 65, 71

Co-occurrence of author keywords
, 64, 71

COARSE theory of measurement
, 100

Coding
, 133

interviews
, 207–208

scheme
, 134

Cognition
, 101

Coldharbour project in Brixton
, 274

Collection, analysis, and discussion of data framework (CAD framework)
, 40, 43

Comparative case study

approach
, 223–225

methodological reflections and commentary
, 230

in tourism
, 228–230

Compensation
, 181

Componential analysis
, 199

Concealment
, 195–196

Constructivism
, 161

Constructivist GT
, 255, 257

Consumer-generated media (CGM)
, 150–151

Content analysis. See also Qualitative content analysis
, 127–129, 143–144, 275

approach
, 143–144

as data treatment technique
, 145–146

within hospitality and tourism research
, 150–151

modes
, 146–148

Convenience sampling
, 105

Conventional content analysis
, 148

Core action research project
, 242

Covariates
, 119–120

Covert method
, 195–196

Credibility
, 136–137, 210

Crowdsourcing platforms
, 81

Data analysis
, 143–144, 167–168

Data collection methods
, 164, 181, 183

Data display
, 146, 167

Data reduction
, 146, 167

Data treatment technique, content analysis as
, 145–146

Data triangulation
, 137

Deductive content analysis
, 133

360-degree involvement
, 274

Demographic data
, 182

Dependability
, 211

Destination marketing organizations (DMOs)
, 143–144

Device ownership
, 179

Dillman’s ToDM
, 82

Directed content analysis
, 148

Directed content analysis. See Deductive content analysis

Disabled children

language and identity
, 27–28

research context
, 27

researching with
, 27–30

Disabled people’s organizations (DPOs)
, 28

Disclosure
, 195–196

Distress
, 30

Documents
, 166

Domain analysis
, 197–198

Drafting PhD thesis
, 172–173

Drawing and verifying conclusions
, 146

EBSCOhost
, 44

Ecological validity
, 183–184

Effect size
, 120

Embedded survey questions

impact on survey response rate and quality
, 83–86

in invitation emails
, 79, 83

Empiricism
, 8

Epistemological position
, 7–9

Epistemology
, 5–8

Ethical reflexivity
, 21–22

Ethics
, 21–22, 172

Ethnographic interviews
, 3, 190

Ethnographic research
, 3

Ethnography
, 189–190

conduct
, 192–196

ethnographic analysis and narrative
, 196–200

forms
, 190

meaning, origins, and types
, 190–192

Evaluative techniques
, 60, 62–63

Event-contingent sampling
, 180

Everyday life
, 177

Experience Sampling Method (ESM)
, 3, 176

analyzing data
, 184

data
, 182

ordinary and extraordinary moments of tourist experience with
, 177–178

preparation
, 179–181

questionnaires
, 179–180

recall bias and ecological validity
, 183–184

study design
, 178–183

in tourism research
, 176–177

Experiment
, 113

Experimental design
, 114

Experimental research
, 119

External validity
, 116

Face-to-face interview
, 275

Factorial ANOVA
, 119

Floodlight analysis
, 119

Follow-up interview
, 183

Food and Beverage (F&B)
, 229

Foot-in-the-door phenomenon
, 83

Front Office managers (FOM)
, 229

Generalizability with dependability
, 136–137

Goodness
, 170

Graphic mapping
, 63–64

Grounded theory (GT)
, 3–4, 191, 253–254

advantages, disadvantages, and limitations of
, 265

approaches to
, 257

comparison of approaches
, 258–260

critical reflection on
, 262–264

design
, 257–261

development of
, 255–257

example
, 261–262

hospitality issues
, 254–255

intellectual evolution and development of
, 257

H-index
, 63

High quality survey data
, 103–107

Hospitality
, 1, 44, 57, 60, 190–191

using abductive methodology for
, 204–205

action research in
, 241–242

using content analysis technique within hospitality and tourism research
, 150–151

context
, 2

experimental research in
, 3

experimenters
, 117

literature of
, 111–112

papers
, 112–113

qualitative content analysis process in hospitality and tourism research
, 130

qualitative research in
, 222–228

research strategy in
, 2

researchers
, 77–78

scholarship
, 8–9

House Keeping managers (HKM)
, 229

Human Resources managers (HRM)
, 229

Identity
, 27–28

Impact factor (IF)
, 60, 63

Increased response rate
, 87

Incremental approach
, 195–196

Incremental gap spotting
, 284–285

Inductive approach
, 133

Inductive-deductive research cycle
, 14

Informants
, 194

Institute for Scientific Information (ISI)
, 56–57

Institutional review boards (IRBs)
, 23–24

Instructional manipulation checks
, 105

Interdisciplinary approach
, 271–272

Internal validity
, 116

International studies
, 221–222

Interpretivism
, 2, 8–10, 13

Interpretivist paradigm
, 222–223

Interval-contingent sampling
, 180

Interviews
, 164–165

Investigator triangulation
, 138

Jaccard stability measure
, 97

Kappa analysis
, 149

Krippendorff’s agreement coefficient alpha
, 149

Language
, 27–28, 194

Latent content analyses
, 148

Leximancer
, 135, 145

Likert scale
, 99

Literature reviews
, 39, 151

Lotka’s Law
, 56–57

Manifest content analyses
, 148

MAXQDA®
, 47

Measurements
, 97, 100

Mechanical Turk (MTurk)
, 115

Median-split
, 119

Mediation
, 119

Merging codes
, 208

Method triangulation
, 137–138

Methodology
, 221–222

chapter
, 157–158

Mixed methods
, 224

Moderation
, 119

Multi-methods of data collection for abduction
, 206

Multiple survey questions
, 100

Narrative reviews
, 284–285

National Parks Service
, 277

Negatively valenced influencing behavior (NVIB)
, 14–15

Netnography
, 3, 191–192

Normal Theory approach
, 119

Notification schedule
, 180–181

NVIVO software
, 135, 145, 207, 211

Objective phase
, 284–285

Observations
, 165–166

One-way ANOVA
, 119

Online surveys
, 77–78

embedded survey questions impact on survey response rate and quality
, 83–86

embedded survey questions in invitation emails
, 79, 83

findings
, 87–89

limitations and future research suggestions
, 91

literature review
, 80–81

methods
, 86–87

recommendations
, 90–91

research
, 80–81

survey response quality
, 82–83

survey response rate
, 81–82

tools
, 84–85

Online travel agents platforms (OTA platforms)
, 2

Ontological position
, 7–9

Ontology
, 5–8

Open coding
, 134, 262

sample of
, 263

Oral history

Coldharbour project in Brixton
, 274

community projects
, 272

face-to-face interview
, 275

interdisciplinary approach
, 271–272

interpretation of
, 270

in tourism and hospitality
, 276–278

tourism and hospitality researchers
, 273–274

UK’s
, 269–270

unstructured interview
, 273

Walking horse culture
, 277–278

Organization development (OD)
, 240

p-value
, 120

Paradigms
, 5–6

Participant observation
, 191

Participants
, 164

Performance analysis. See Evaluative techniques

PhD methodology chapter
, 159–172

data analysis
, 167–168

data collection methods
, 164

documents
, 166

ethics
, 172

goodness and trustworthiness
, 170

interviews
, 164–165

observations
, 165–166

participants
, 164

philosophical foundation
, 160–162

research approach
, 159–160

research design
, 162

research sites
, 163–164

research steps
, 168

researcher positionality
, 170–172

Philosophical assumptions
, 5–6

Philosophical foundation
, 160–162

Positivism
, 2, 8–12

Post-positivism
, 8–13, 16

Post-positivists
, 9–10

Practical knowledge
, 239, 245–246

Pragmatic-inspired approach
, 40

Pragmatism
, 8–9, 13, 15–16

Pragmatists
, 14

Pre-testing
, 107

Privacy
, 181

Procedural ethics vs. being ethical
, 22–24

critical reflections on ethical journeys
, 24–26

impact on readers
, 26

impact on researcher
, 25–26

researching with disabled children and young people
, 27–30

sex and bestiality in leisure and tourism
, 30–32

social media data with sensitive content
, 24–25

ProQuest
, 40

Psychometric methods of scale development
, 100

Publications
, 62, 111–112, 118

Publishing
, 111–112

analysis and results section
, 119–121

introductory section of paper
, 112–113

literature review and hypothesis section
, 113–114

method section
, 114–118

multiple studies
, 118

outcome variables
, 117–118

participants
, 115–116

recommendations
, 121–122

settings and realism of manipulation
, 116–117

Purposive sampling for abduction
, 206–207

Qualitative content analysis
, 127–128, 130, 143–144, 205

checklist for researchers
, 131–132

data collection and analysis
, 133–135

evaluation of process
, 136–138

literature review
, 145–148

preparation
, 130–133

process in hospitality and tourism research
, 130

reporting findings
, 135–136

trustworthiness of qualitative content analyses
, 149–150

Qualitative Data Analysis (QDA)
, 47–48

Qualitative method
, 184–185

Qualitative methodology
, 222–223

Qualitative research
, 145

in hospitality and tourism studies
, 222–228

literature review
, 158–159

method
, 129, 157–158

PhD methodology chapter
, 159–172

Qualtrics
, 78, 83

Quantitative research method
, 129

QuestionPro
, 78, 83

Rationalism
, 8

Realism
, 9, 117

Reality
, 7, 9

Recall bias
, 183–184

Recruiting
, 181

compensation
, 181

number of participants
, 181

privacy
, 181

Reflexivity
, 21–22

Relational techniques
, 60, 63–64

Reliability
, 136–137, 149

Reporting of results
, 120–121

Research

agenda
, 49–50

approach
, 159–160, 237

design
, 162

method
, 112–113

paradigms
, 6–7

philosophy
, 5–6

sites
, 163–164

steps
, 168

Research Ethics Board (REB)
, 23

Researcher
, 194–195

positionality
, 170–172

Respondent attention
, 89

Response bias
, 88

Response quality
, 82–83

Response quality
, 88–89

Response rate
, 87–88, 182–183

Rigor
, 136–137

Rooted ethnographers
, 194–195

ScienceDirect
, 40

Scientific mapping
, 63–64

Selective coding
, 260–262

Self-citations
, 62

Semi-covert component
, 195–196

7-point bipolar scale
, 98

7-point Likert scale
, 106

Sex in leisure and tourism
, 30–32

Signal contingent sampling
, 180

Simulation tests
, 119

Small business social responsibility in foodservice sector
, 211–216

analysis of online documents
, 212

merging codes
, 213–214

refining themes
, 214–215

transcribing and coding interviews
, 213

writing up
, 216

Smartphones
, 175–176

Sobel z-test
, 119

Social cohesion
, 159–160, 169

Social constructivism
, 8–10, 13, 16

Social media
, 22

data with sensitive content
, 24–25

research context
, 24–25

Social networks
, 285

Sociogram
, 197

Software
, 179

Spotlight analysis
, 119

Stability
, 97

Straussian approach
, 256

Straussian GT
, 255, 257

Strict stability measure
, 97

Sub-themes
, 208

Subjective momentary experiences
, 177

Subjective phase
, 284–285

Suitability of survey studies
, 101–103

Summative content analysis
, 148

SurveyMonkey
, 78, 83

Surveys. See also Online surveys
, 95

completion
, 78

factors undermining survey data quality
, 96–100

high quality survey data
, 103–107

implicit assumptions
, 96

research
, 80

respondents
, 97–100

response quality
, 82–83

response rate
, 81–82

suitability of survey studies
, 101–103

Systematic literature reviews
, 40

data analysis
, 47–48

data collection
, 43–47

data discussion
, 48–50

implications and limitations
, 50–51

objectives
, 46

planning
, 43–50

pragmatic methodology
, 41–43

Systematic reviews
, 284–285

in tourism research
, 40–41

Taxonomic analysis
, 198

Technology
, 185

Thematic analysis
, 196, 203–205

with abductive research methodology
, 204–207

Themes
, 208

refining
, 208–209

Theoretical triangulation
, 138

Theory testing
, 113–114

Thesis action research project
, 242–244

framing thesis research issue
, 243

gaining access
, 243–244

Total design method (ToDM)
, 82

Tourism
, 1, 40–41, 44, 57, 60, 159–160, 175–176, 190–191, 221–222

using abductive methodology for
, 204–205

academics
, 176

action research in
, 241–242

comparative case study in
, 228–230

using content analysis technique within hospitality and tourism research
, 150–151

context
, 2

ESM in tourism research
, 176–177

experimental research in
, 3

experimenters
, 117

literature of
, 111–112

papers
, 112–113

qualitative content analysis process in hospitality and tourism research
, 130

qualitative research in
, 222–228

research strategy in
, 2

researchers
, 77–78

scholarship
, 8–9

studies
, 223

tourism-oriented research
, 224–226

Tourist experience
, 175–176

Transcribing interviews
, 207–208

Transferability
, 136–137, 210–211

Triangulation
, 48, 137–138, 170

Trigger
, 180–181

True positivist approach
, 10

Trustworthiness
, 170

of qualitative content analyses
, 149–150

Turkish tourism
, 277

Typology
, 197

Unit of analysis
, 133

User-generated content (UGC)
, 150–151, 287

Validity
, 136–137, 170

Virtual reality (VR)
, 116–117

Visual data
, 166

Walking horse culture
, 277–278

Web of Science
, 44

Women hotel managers’ experiences
, 228–230

Writing up
, 209

Young people

ableist bias
, 29–30

handling unexpected distress
, 30

language and identity
, 27–28

research context
, 27

researching with
, 27–30

Prelims
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Contemporary Research Paradigms and Philosophies
Chapter 3 Procedural Ethics vs Being Ethical: A Critical Appraisal
Chapter 4 Get on Task: A Pragmatic Tutorial on Planning and Conducting a Systematic Literature Review
Chapter 5 Bibliometric Studies in the Hospitality and Tourism Field: A Guide for Researchers
Chapter 6 Embedded Questions in Online Survey Email Invitations: The Impact on Response Rate and Quality
Chapter 7 Designing Good Survey Studies
Chapter 8 Publishing Experimental Research in Hospitality and Tourism: Some Key Insights
Chapter 9 Conducting a Systematic Qualitative Content Analysis in Hospitality and Tourism Research
Chapter 10 The Use of Qualitative Content Analysis in Hospitality and Tourism
Chapter 11 Reflections of a Qualitative Researcher: Structuring a Qualitative Research Methodology–An Illustration from a PhD Thesis
Chapter 12 Experience Sampling Method in a Qualitative Study of Tourists' Smartphone Use
Chapter 13 Ethnography Explained: Toward Conducting, Analyzing, and Writing an Ethnographic Narrative
Chapter 14 Abductive Thematic Analysis in Hospitality and Tourism Research
Chapter 15 The Comparison-Based Case Study Approach in Hospitality and Tourism Research
Chapter 16 Action Research in Hospitality and Tourism Research
Chapter 17 Applying Grounded Theory in Hospitality and Tourism Research: Critical Reflections
Chapter 18 What's Past Is Prologue: Oral History's Offer to Hospitality and Tourism Research
Chapter 19 Conclusions
Index