Using Animal Movement Theory to Inform Visitor Movement Research: Integrating Movement Ecology and Hierarchical Habitat Selection for Outdoor Recreation Contexts

IF 2.2 3区 社会学 Q2 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
Susan A. Sidder, Troy E. Hall, Ashley D’Antonio
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Visitor movement research in outdoor recreation contexts generates information about recreation activity type, timing, and distribution. Much of this work is descriptive or exploratory, limiting the extent to which findings can be used for movement prediction. This is problematic for practitioners seeking to use information on visitor movement to proactively inform management decisions. Using theory to inform visitor movement research can overcome these limitations, increasing the utility of research to make predictions. Drawing from animal ecology, we present an integrated movement ecology and hierarchical habitat selection framework as a theory-based approach for studying visitor movement. We operationalize framework constructs for visitor movement, identify human dimensions literature congruent with this approach, and provide examples to illustrate application. Using the proposed framework will strengthen visitor movement research by providing theory to guide variable identification, identifying relationships for hypothesis testing, increasing the generalizability of findings, and moving the field toward movement prediction.
基于动物运动理论的游客运动研究:运动生态学与户外休闲环境分层生境选择的整合
户外娱乐环境下的游客运动研究产生了关于娱乐活动类型、时间和分布的信息。这些工作大多是描述性或探索性的,限制了研究结果用于运动预测的程度。这对于从业人员来说是有问题的,他们试图使用访客移动的信息来主动通知管理决策。利用理论为游客运动研究提供信息可以克服这些限制,增加研究预测的效用。从动物生态学的角度出发,提出了一个综合运动生态学和分层生境选择框架,作为研究游客运动的理论基础。我们对游客运动的框架结构进行了操作,确定了与这种方法一致的人类维度文献,并提供了示例来说明应用。使用所提出的框架将通过提供理论来指导变量识别,确定假设检验的关系,增加研究结果的普遍性,并将该领域向运动预测方向发展,从而加强游客运动研究。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
8.00%
发文量
83
期刊介绍: Society and Natural Resources publishes cutting edge social science research that advances understanding of the interaction between society and natural resources.Social science research is extensive and comes from a number of disciplines, including sociology, psychology, political science, communications, planning, education, and anthropology. We welcome research from all of these disciplines and interdisciplinary social science research that transcends the boundaries of any single social science discipline. We define natural resources broadly to include water, air, wildlife, fisheries, forests, natural lands, urban ecosystems, and intensively managed lands. While we welcome all papers that fit within this broad scope, we especially welcome papers in the following four important and broad areas in the field: 1. Protected area management and governance 2. Stakeholder analysis, consultation and engagement; deliberation processes; governance; conflict resolution; social learning; social impact assessment 3. Theoretical frameworks, epistemological issues, and methodological perspectives 4. Multiscalar character of social implications of natural resource management
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