Published January 4, 2017
| Version v1
Publication
Consumer innovative behavior in vacation travel
Description
This paper focuses on the study of innovative behavior of tourists through the dimensions of
sensation seeking. To our knowledge, few studies have explored the dimensions of sensation seeking in
relation to the innovative behavior of tourists in their holiday travel decisions. Sensation seeking is
defined as the desire for varied, new, and complex experiences, and the willingness to take physical,
social, legal, and financial risks in order to achieve such experience. Four components of sensation
seeking are identified: thrill and adventure seeking; experience seeking; disinhibition; and boredom
susceptibility.
This study is based on a sample of 543 university students. The results show that innovators obtain
higher scores on the total scale of sensation seeking than non-innovators, both men and women, as
well as on the four dimensions of the scale. In addition, sensation seeking is a significant predictor of
the consumer innovativeness in the vacation travel. It is noted that three of the four dimensions of
sensation seeking (thrill and adventure seeking, experience seeking, and disinhibition) have a significant
influence on the travel service innovativeness.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://idus.us.es/handle/11441/51537
- URN
- urn:oai:idus.us.es:11441/51537
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- USE