Can Live Streaming Save the Tourism Industry from a Pandemic? A Study of Social Media
As a reflection of shifting and fluid experiences in time and space, live streaming can reduce losses in the tourism industry associated with travel restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic. Compared with the use of live streaming activities in entertainment, shopping, sport, e-sport, religious, ed...
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doaj-5c62fb5309954e58941f5ef636ae96d72021-09-26T00:21:50ZengMDPI AGISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information2220-99642021-09-011059559510.3390/ijgi10090595Can Live Streaming Save the Tourism Industry from a Pandemic? A Study of Social MediaQihang Qiu0Yifan Zuo1Mu Zhang2Faculty of Human Geography and Planning, Adam Mickiewicz University, 61-680 Poznan, PolandSchool of Management, Jinan University, Guangzhou 510632, ChinaShenzhen Tourism College, Jinan University, Shenzhen 518053, ChinaAs a reflection of shifting and fluid experiences in time and space, live streaming can reduce losses in the tourism industry associated with travel restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic. Compared with the use of live streaming activities in entertainment, shopping, sport, e-sport, religious, educational, and academic settings, the tourism context has yet to be explored. This study takes China as a case to examine tourism practices related to live streaming. Specifically, 48,114 social media posts were subjected to systematic content analysis. The dataset contained live streaming content related to 147 countries and 34 Chinese provincial administrative regions between 2010 and 2021. Findings revealed the following: (1) the development of tourism live streaming in China can be classified into germination, exploration, and opportunity stages; (2) live content mainly evoked positive emotions, whereas negative sentiment resulted from illegal or boring content; (3) users’ perceptions of tourism live streaming content involved institutions, live streaming tools, live streaming attractions, the live streaming economy, people, facilities and information, time, and regions; and (4) live streaming tools and attractions constituted the core of the identified semantic network and had the strongest regulation capabilities in tourism live streaming activities. Findings shed light on latent cultural meanings in social media communications, where tourism live streaming features high-frequency linguistic signs.https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/10/9/595live streamingtourismsocial mediabig datacontent analysissemantic network analysis |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Qihang Qiu Yifan Zuo Mu Zhang |
spellingShingle |
Qihang Qiu Yifan Zuo Mu Zhang Can Live Streaming Save the Tourism Industry from a Pandemic? A Study of Social Media ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information live streaming tourism social media big data content analysis semantic network analysis |
author_facet |
Qihang Qiu Yifan Zuo Mu Zhang |
author_sort |
Qihang Qiu |
title |
Can Live Streaming Save the Tourism Industry from a Pandemic? A Study of Social Media |
title_short |
Can Live Streaming Save the Tourism Industry from a Pandemic? A Study of Social Media |
title_full |
Can Live Streaming Save the Tourism Industry from a Pandemic? A Study of Social Media |
title_fullStr |
Can Live Streaming Save the Tourism Industry from a Pandemic? A Study of Social Media |
title_full_unstemmed |
Can Live Streaming Save the Tourism Industry from a Pandemic? A Study of Social Media |
title_sort |
can live streaming save the tourism industry from a pandemic? a study of social media |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information |
issn |
2220-9964 |
publishDate |
2021-09-01 |
description |
As a reflection of shifting and fluid experiences in time and space, live streaming can reduce losses in the tourism industry associated with travel restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic. Compared with the use of live streaming activities in entertainment, shopping, sport, e-sport, religious, educational, and academic settings, the tourism context has yet to be explored. This study takes China as a case to examine tourism practices related to live streaming. Specifically, 48,114 social media posts were subjected to systematic content analysis. The dataset contained live streaming content related to 147 countries and 34 Chinese provincial administrative regions between 2010 and 2021. Findings revealed the following: (1) the development of tourism live streaming in China can be classified into germination, exploration, and opportunity stages; (2) live content mainly evoked positive emotions, whereas negative sentiment resulted from illegal or boring content; (3) users’ perceptions of tourism live streaming content involved institutions, live streaming tools, live streaming attractions, the live streaming economy, people, facilities and information, time, and regions; and (4) live streaming tools and attractions constituted the core of the identified semantic network and had the strongest regulation capabilities in tourism live streaming activities. Findings shed light on latent cultural meanings in social media communications, where tourism live streaming features high-frequency linguistic signs. |
topic |
live streaming tourism social media big data content analysis semantic network analysis |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/10/9/595 |
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