积极心理学及其在旅游研究中的应用。

Wu Maoying, P. Pearce
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引用次数: 4

摘要

积极心理学是一个研究领域,旨在强调积极情绪,性格优势和积极制度为人类幸福和福祉所起的作用。自2000年以来,这一心理学领域的重要性迅速上升。由于积极心理学与当代社会经济关注的一致性,以及与普通人对幸福的追求的一致性,它已经越来越多地被一系列学科所采用。然而,它在旅游业中的应用却非常缓慢。2007年,澳大利亚旅游心理学家菲利普·皮尔斯(Philip Pearce)博士首次将其引入旅游研究。本文首先探讨了积极心理学的核心思想。综述了临床心理学的背景、与传统临床心理学的区别以及其独特的研究方法。更重要的是,详细论述了积极情绪、积极人格和积极制度这三个核心研究领域。并给出了三者之间的关系。此外,积极的干预措施,有助于实现上述三个结果被考虑。本综述的重点在于将早期的积极心理学研究引入旅游业。皮尔斯和他的同事们,尤其是塞巴斯蒂安·菲勒普的工作,已经得到了彻底的审查和认可。他们的工作和其他人一起,充分支持了旅游目标和积极心理学目标之间的一致性。例如,以旅游行为为例,个人旅行的好处可以符合马丁·塞利格曼(2011)PERMA模型提出的所有要素(如快乐、参与、关系、意义和成就)。支持积极心理学的现有文献及其在旅游中的应用有助于丰富我们的理解。然而,如果我们考虑到中国的背景,这一领域的研究可能会更有见地和有用。一个关键的问题是要纳入中国的文化问题,特别是有影响力的儒家,佛教,以及现代共产主义文化。这些文化背景为探索中国游客行为和旅游社区发展的独特特征提供了见解。考虑到更广泛的文化问题和关于中国旅游的研究,我们提出了三个进一步研究的领域。首先,积极心理学在旅游社区研究中的研究较少。就中国而言,许多省份和地区都将旅游业作为提高当地生计的工具,研究旅游业如何改善旅游社区的福祉既及时又重要。其次,积极心理学的思想也可以应用到蓬勃发展的中国旅游市场和消费者研究中。例如,哪些问题会影响中国游客的积极现场情感体验,以及旅游的学习成果,特别是非传统旅游(如海外自由行、间隔年、沙发冲浪和自驾游)的学习成果。最后但并非最不重要的一点与中国老龄化人口的福祉和日益增加的流动性有关。中国这一群体的旅游风格和收益可能与西方世界的雪鸟和灰色游牧民族大不相同。研究旅游和严肃休闲对旅游社区及其自身福祉的贡献,对中国的政策制定者和旅游业都有特别的帮助。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Positive psychology and its applications in tourism studies.
Positive psychology is an area of study that seeks to highlight the role of positive emotions, character strengths and positive institutions serving human happiness and well-being. There has been a rapid rise in the prominence of this area of psychology since the year 2000. Due to its consistency with the social economic concerns of the contemporary era, as well its accordance with ordinary people' s pursuit of happiness, positive psychology has been increasingly adopted by a range of disciplines. Its application in tourism, however, has been very slow. It was first introduced to tourism studies by Dr. Philip Pearce, a tourism psychologist based in Australia, in 2007. This article initially addressed the core ideas about positive psychology. Its background, its differences from the traditional clinical psychology, and its distinctive ways of doing research were reviewed. More importantly, the three core research areas, positive emotion, positive personality, and positive institutions were addressed in detail. The relationships among these three elements were also presented. In addition, positive interventions, which help to achieve the three afore-mentioned outcomes were considered. The highlight of this overview lies in the introduction of earlier positive psychology studies to tourism. The work of Pearce and his colleagues', especially Sebastian Filep, has been thoroughly reviewed and acknowledged. Their work, together with others, fully supports a consistency between the goals of tourism and the aims of positive psychology. For example, tourist behaviour as a case study, the benefits of travelling for individuals can fit in all the elements proposed by Martin Seligman's (2011) PERMA model (e.g. pleasure, engagement, relationships, meaning and achievement). The existing literature which underpins positive psychology and its adoption in tourism is helpful in enriching our understanding. Research in this area, however, can be more insightful and useful if we take the Chinese context into consideration. A critical issue is to incorporate the Chinese cultural issues, especially the influential Confucianism, the Buddhism, as well as the modern communist cultures. These cultural contexts offer insights in exploring the distinctive characters of both Chinese tourist behaviour and the tourism community development. Considering the broader cultural issues and the research in and about China tourism, we proposed three areas for further research. Firstly, there is a paucity of positive psychology studies in tourism community research. As far as China is concerned, where many provinces and regions are using tourism as a tool to enhance local livelihoods, studies about how tourism can improve tourism community's well-being are both timely and important. Secondly, the thinking in positive psychologies can also be applied to the extraordinarily growing Chinese tourist market and consumer studies. Examples include what issues will influence Chinese tourists' positive on-site emotional experiences, and what are the learning outcomes of travelling, especially those for non-traditional travel (e. g. independent overseas travel, gap year, couch surfing, and self-drive tourism). The last but not the least point is concerned with the well-being of China's aging population and its increasing mobility. The kinds of tourism styles and benefits for this group in China may be very different from snowbirds and grey nomads in the western world. Research about how travel and serious leisure contribute to tourism communities and their own well-being is of particular help to both the policy makers and tourism industry in China.
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