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	<title>Turismo en Teoría &#187; Information (1)</title>
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		<title>Information and Tourism</title>
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<p lang="en-GB"><span style="color: #008000;">All rights reserved. Complete or partial reproduction is prohibited without the permission of Marinus Gisolf and without mentioning the source</span></p>
<p lang="en-GB"><span style="font-size: medium;"><em><strong>INFORMATION AND TOURISM</strong></em></span></p>
<blockquote>
<p lang="en-GB"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Introduction</strong></span></span></p>
</blockquote>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     The most important characteristic of a </span><span style="color: #7030a0;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="color: #000000;"><span class="domtooltips" title="Tourist attraction: Also called an Impsource. There are in this case main or side Impsources.">tourist attraction</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> is that it is “consumed” at the destination, rather than at the </span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;">tourist</span></span><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="color: #000000;">&#8216;</span>s home. This means that in order to consume the product, the client must first travel to it, thus laying the foundation for what we call </span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;">tourism</span></span><span style="font-size: medium;">: somebody moving to a site where there is a <span class="domtooltips" title="Tourist attraction: Also called an Impsource. There are in this case main or side Impsources.">tourist attraction</span> of some kind, such as a beach destination, indigenous pyramids, a concert, nature reserve or a special sports event. The tourist travels to the product to <span class="domtooltips" title="Experiences: in tourism this concerns the moment of experiencing, whereby personal values are added to sensory intake (impact calories or Impcal), forming a nucleus in our memory to be used subsequently for the comparison with other experiences.">experience</span> (consume) it.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     The sublime moment in tourism is the instant when a tourist starts to live an </span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span class="domtooltips" title="Experiences: in tourism this concerns the moment of experiencing, whereby personal values are added to sensory intake (impact calories or Impcal), forming a nucleus in our memory to be used subsequently for the comparison with other experiences.">experience</span></span></span><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="color: #000000;">,</span> in other words, when he starts to consume Impact Calories<span style="color: #000000;"> (</span></span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span class="domtooltips" title="ImpCal: Impact calories: A set of impulses absorbed by the senses, which later may be processed into an experience.">ImpCal</span></span></span><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="color: #000000;">)</span>. The intake and the processing of <span class="domtooltips" title="ImpCal: Impact calories: A set of impulses absorbed by the senses, which later may be processed into an experience.">ImpCal</span> lead to an <span class="domtooltips" title="Experiences: in tourism this concerns the moment of experiencing, whereby personal values are added to sensory intake (impact calories or Impcal), forming a nucleus in our memory to be used subsequently for the comparison with other experiences.">experience</span>, and that is exactly what the tourist is looking for. The tourist wants to have an <span class="domtooltips" title="Experiences: in tourism this concerns the moment of experiencing, whereby personal values are added to sensory intake (impact calories or Impcal), forming a nucleus in our memory to be used subsequently for the comparison with other experiences.">experience</span> and that is only possible when he is using his own senses and absorbing <span class="domtooltips" title="ImpCal: Impact calories: A set of impulses absorbed by the senses, which later may be processed into an experience.">ImpCal</span>, later to be processed into an inner <span class="domtooltips" title="Experiences: in tourism this concerns the moment of experiencing, whereby personal values are added to sensory intake (impact calories or Impcal), forming a nucleus in our memory to be used subsequently for the comparison with other experiences.">experience</span>. In fact, the tourist pays for the </span><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">possibility</span></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> of consuming <span class="domtooltips" title="ImpCal: Impact calories: A set of impulses absorbed by the senses, which later may be processed into an experience.">ImpCal</span> and the processing of <span class="domtooltips" title="ImpCal: Impact calories: A set of impulses absorbed by the senses, which later may be processed into an experience.">ImpCal</span> starts at the beginning of his journey, when he closes his front door behind him. <span class="domtooltips" title="ImpCal: Impact calories: A set of impulses absorbed by the senses, which later may be processed into an experience.">ImpCal</span> can be taken in during the trip to the destination, upon arrival and finally, when he reaches the main attraction (the </span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;">Main Impact Source</span></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> or <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsource</span>), which was the reason for his going there in the first place. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Nearby there may be smaller tourist attractions developed for tourists, the so-called </span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span class="domtooltips" title="Side Impsource: These small Impsources have been arranged for tourists specifically and are usually located near a Main Impsource, making use of the presence of tourists in the area.">Side <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="color: #000000;">.</span> Apart from these, there is the normal entourage involving local daily life &#8211; the </span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span class="domtooltips" title="Shared Impsources:  Impsources that can be used by anyone including tourists. They exist 
with or without the presence of tourists and have not been made 
especially for them.">Shared <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong> -</strong></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> that may also be interesting for the tourist. Another possible <span class="domtooltips" title="ImpCal: Impact calories: A set of impulses absorbed by the senses, which later may be processed into an experience.">ImpCal</span> intake can be produced by chance meetings or sudden occurrences, the </span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span class="domtooltips" title="Incidental Impsources: Sources for the intake of ImpCal based on sudden or accidental occurrencies.">Incidental <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span> </span></span><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="color: #000000;">(</span>accidents also form part of <span class="domtooltips" title="Incidental Impsources: Sources for the intake of ImpCal based on sudden or accidental occurrencies.">incidental <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span>). In order to create opportunities for tourists to visit places and have <span class="domtooltips" title="ImpCal: Impact calories: A set of impulses absorbed by the senses, which later may be processed into an experience.">ImpCal</span> intake of some sort, many travel organizations deal with advertising and selling ‘possible experiences’ (also called tourist products). This may involve travel stores, tour operators or travel guides. In short, tourism consists of a large number of people, organizations, hotels or other types of buildings, means of transport and many other entities that form a complicated pattern of networks and relations. The tourist forms part of these networks, too.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Tourism consists of a number of obligatory components, such as staying overnight (minimum one night, maximum one year) and mobility. The component of staying overnight is arbitrary, but generally accepted (World Tourism Organization). Mobility is inseparably connected with tourism, because to be a tourist you have to travel to a place </span><span style="font-size: medium;">that is not the home environment, otherwise you would not be a tourist. Travelling therefore forms an obligatory part of tourism. Apart from this, travelling in tourism is on a voluntary basis, which marks one of the differences between tourists and <span class="domtooltips" title="Travellers: In contrast to tourists, the traveller has to go somewhere for an obligatory reason. Until the second half of the 20th century there hardly was a clear distinction between tourists and travellers.">travellers</span> in general. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     There is a third obligatory component: information supply also forms an inseparabl</span><span style="font-size: medium;">e part of tourism for exactly the same reason that a tourist travels to parts of the world that are largely or completely unknown to him. The tourist must become informed about the destination he or she wants to visit and even the decision itself about where to go is based on information. One may have heard enthusiastic stories from the neighbours or seen a beautiful nature film on television, which may have tipped the balance in favour of some specific holiday destination. Travel brochures, guide books, TV programmes or novels may all be sources for choosing holiday destinations and additional details about their infrastructure. Regardless of whether a tourist hops on his bike and starts travelling with nothing more than a backpack and a little tent, or he books a complete all-inclusive holiday arrangement with a travel organization, information supply is vital and as such it forms an inseparable part of tourism.</span></p>
<blockquote>
<p lang="en-GB"><span style="font-size: medium;"><em><strong>Information</strong></em></span></p>
</blockquote>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     The concept of information itself covers a lot of ground and is used in many scientific disciplines – each of them interpreting the term within its own field of action (</span><span style="font-size: medium;">e.g. computer science, philosophy or mathematics). In general, we can state that information contains data that makes some sense to someone; in other words, we are talking about </span><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong>meaningful data</strong></span><span style="font-size: medium;">. The term data is another concept open to many interpretations, but we shall stick to the definition that states that data are putative facts regarding some difference or lack of continuity within the same context. A red little ball in a box ful of similar red little balls, does not form a datum, since it does not distinguish itself.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Data </span><span style="font-size: medium;">alone are not information, but they become so, when they have special meaning for the receiver. A telephone number by itself is just a piece of data; it turns into information when the receiver knows that it is a telephone number, realizes whom he can contact with it and knows how to use a telephone. When someone does not have this knowledge, or has no access to telephones at all, the number just remains a datum.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     What we </span><span style="font-size: medium;">must realize is that anything surrounding or happening to us is a possible source of information. It all depends on whether we have a particular reason for extracting a certain happening or fact from its context to be presented on its own. This also means that in order to be called such, information has to be of interest to someone. When a tourist is startled because a Northern Harrier flies away right in front of him, this may be a source for a piece of information of great interest to a professional birder, while the average city dweller could not care less. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Information may be further segmented into instructional and <span class="domtooltips" title="Factual information: concrete simple data tourists try to obtain about the details of their journeys, such as flight times, road signs or what type of shoes to wear. This type of information functions as an intermediary in tourist  actor-networks.">factual information</span>. The first refers to the transfer of knowledge, while the second has to be subdivided into true information and false information. In the first case, this leads to real information while </span><span style="font-size: medium;">in the latter it leads to </span><span style="font-size: medium;">disinformation</span><span style="font-size: medium;"> (intentionally false) or </span><span style="font-size: medium;">misinformation</span><span style="font-size: medium;"> (unintentionally false).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     A collection of information transmitted with a specific goal can be called a ‘message’. This message can contain information on different levels. However, as long as we cannot give meaning to information, because it is presented in an unknown language for example, this information cannot be transferred and we cannot speak of information in this case. Information is </span><span style="font-size: medium;">therefore a subjective matter.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Another problem we may find is the case of </span><span style="font-size: medium;">noise</span><span style="font-size: medium;">. External noise occurs when the transfer of information is disturbed by outside noise (a busy street, for example). Internal noise refers to the case where the receiver is not giving the information his or her full attention and is distracted by other thoughts. The concept of noise is not applied when the information is presented in a form the receiver does not understand. A case where we do use the term noise is when a piece of information passes through many recipients and senders before reaching its final destination – we are talking about third-hand information.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     To complete this section on information, we can distinguish four interdependent levels:</span></p>
<blockquote>
<ol>
<li><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong>Pragmatics</strong></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> is concerned with the purpose of the communication and links the issue of signs</span><span style="font-size: medium;">with intention.</span></li>
<li><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong>Semantics</strong></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> is concerned with the meaning of a message conveyed in a communicative act – in other words dealing with the meaning of the signs.</span></li>
<li><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong>Syntax</strong></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> is concerned with the formalism used to represent the message. The language that is used and its syntax is concerned with its correct and comprehensible use.</span></li>
<li><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong>Empirics </strong></span><span style="font-size: medium;">is the study of signals used to carry the message; we are talking here about physical qualities (sound, light, electronics, etc.).</span></li>
</ol>
</blockquote>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Our last remark on this theme is that information is not simply a matter of humans. Among computers there now exists intense information exchange traffic (as long as systems are compatible) without any human interference. But in nature as well we can find many examples of information transfers, such as flowers giving information by smell and colour to bees. There are many more instances of information without any human intervention.</span></p>
<blockquote>
<p lang="en-GB"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Information and Tourist Networks</strong></span></span></p>
</blockquote>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     In the specific case of tourism we can distinguish many forms of information and in our case we shall concentrate on the tourist himself. First of all, the tourists-to-be must think about where they want to go to for their holidays and they must decide which type of holiday they want. The tourist will need information to make this choice. Once the destination has been selected, he will need information about all the details of the journey, the local infrastructure (hotels, attractions, restaurants, etc.), transportation, and in general, what can be done there. Upon arrival at the destination the tourist has the chance to explore local information sources and to arrange any trip or overnight stay if required. We cannot think of tourism without information exchange on many different levels, concerning not only the tourist but the tour operators as well, both of whom need information about hotels, flights, entry fees, etc.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Many </span><span style="font-size: medium;">entities</span><span style="font-size: medium;"> are active in tourism, including people (tourists, hotel staff, air traffic controllers, bus drivers, and so on) as well as things (hotels, airplanes, souvenirs or landscapes). The sheer fact that a tourist arrives at some place and enjoys something (an impressive glacier perhaps) means that many of these entities have been actively helping the tourist arrive at that particular place. These entities must work together, such as a tour operator who makes a hotel reservation for the tourist or a transport company that must know when the tourist has to be picked up. Cooperation among entities results in networks and the interplay within and among networks gives life to the concept of tourism. Obviously, this is not only the case in tourism, because life is full of networks on many different levels. Often we do not realize how many networks we are acting in. A sudden incident, such as losing your passport, makes us realize that an embassy is a network connected to many others, that a passport photograph has to be taken (another set of networks) or that a statement has to be made at the local police station, again tapping into completely different networks.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Cooperation and communication among entities form the basic ingredients of a network. This may occur on many different levels and with both senders and receivers. In this sense, things are also active actors, although more as receivers than senders. What brings life to a network are the actions and input of the entities. A restaurant provides meals, the bar the booze and the hotel the room to rest. These are things or services that link entities with each other and crystallize the connections between entities and networks. These can be called </span><span style="font-size: medium;">intermediaries</span><span style="font-size: medium;"> in a network, referring precisely to those services and things other entities are interested in. Other examples are credit cards, passports, tour guides, transport or money. It is all about things or people forming the link between entities and networks, which in turn are meant to help tourist get to the place to enjoy that magnificent glacier. By the way, one always has to realize that it was the tourist’s<span style="color: #000000;"> voluntary</span> choice to form part of a network and to decide which intermediaries apply to his case or not.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     There is another </span><span style="font-size: medium;"><span class="domtooltips" title="Netwotk intermediary: Between different tourism networks there are reasons why they connect. These are called intermediaries and may be tangible such as meals or transport, or of a wider sense, such as money or factual information.">intermediary</span> we can mention: detailed information the tourist asks for specifically, such as the price of something, departure times, location, what type of shoes to wear or a signpost at a crossroads. This is information meant for everybody and not just for tourists, but it does have a specific target group. For a certain destination, tourists are not likely to be interested in possible tax advantages for small businesses, while the average investor will not care much about the number of tents the local campground can handle.</span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div id="attachment_1442" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://www.tourismtheories.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/Free-Parking-A.png"><img class="size-medium wp-image-1442" title="Free Parking A" src="http://www.tourismtheories.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/Free-Parking-A-300x199.png" alt="Free Parking eng" width="300" height="199" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">A free parking sign made by the locals: <span class="domtooltips" title="Factual information: concrete simple data tourists try to obtain about the details of their journeys, such as flight times, road signs or what type of shoes to wear. This type of information functions as an intermediary in tourist  actor-networks.">factual information</span> on one hand, but at the same time on a pragmatic level it is about an invitation for tourist to stop to buy something at the pottery stall.</p></div>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     There are many entities dealing with just this: furnishing tourists with specific information based on simple data. We shall call this </span><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong><span class="domtooltips" title="Factual information: concrete simple data tourists try to obtain about the details of their journeys, such as flight times, road signs or what type of shoes to wear. This type of information functions as an intermediary in tourist  actor-networks.">factual information</span></strong></span><span style="font-size: medium;">.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">The tourist also has to deal with other types of information. First of all, there is the information the tourist does not ask for specifically, but it is presented to him nonetheless: travel brochures, tour operators’ internet sites, ads in newspapers or magazines, etc. This information supply forms part of the entities that maintain network relations and that want to invite tourists to become part of their network; in other words they are offering their services. This information has a clear target and the message is directed to tourists only; it tries to give a certain image of a destination. This information does not form part of a network and it is not an <span class="domtooltips" title="Netwotk intermediary: Between different tourism networks there are reasons why they connect. These are called intermediaries and may be tangible such as meals or transport, or of a wider sense, such as money or factual information.">intermediary</span>. We call it </span><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong><span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">target information</span></strong></span><span style="font-size: medium;">.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     A Belgian tour operator describes the active </span><span style="font-size: medium;">Arenal volcano in Costa Rica as follows: “In the evening you see, from a safe distance, glowing pieces of lava thundering down the volcano. An unforgettable sight. Fireflies are dancing above the stream of lava, everybody is mouse-quiet. Far away you hear the volcano’s thundering and roaring under a sparkling sky.” Apart from the fact that half the time this volcano is in the clouds and one cannot observe anything, the content part is being sacrificed in favour of an attractive description of people watching a volcano (fireflies will not last very long dancing above glowing lava…).</span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div id="attachment_1444" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://www.tourismtheories.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/RESPONS-Travel.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-1444" title="RESPONS Travel" src="http://www.tourismtheories.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/RESPONS-Travel-300x224.jpg" alt="respons travel eng" width="300" height="224" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text"><span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">Target information</span> as image: suggesting there is something to see and at the same time giving potential tourist the feeling that they could be there watching this rare bird.</p></div>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     The third type of information concerns the atmosphere, colours and smells of a place. We think of the exchange of impressions friends or colleagues have had, impressions from nature films, novels or newspaper articles. These info-sources surround the tourist and he can make use of it or not. It may also deal with the background in some news item, or a fashion photo shoot may be taken in some country that may spark a tourist’s interest, who absorbs it and keeps <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span> somewhere in his memory. The information that can be distilled from this type of information depends very much on the tourist’s </span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;">referential framework</span></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> and it also depends on what a tourist thinks of the source. A friend’s opinion may be quite valuable – or the opposite. This type of information is usually not geared towards tourism (although it may be) and it depends heavily on the tourist’s willingness to absorb it. We call this </span><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong><span class="domtooltips" title="Descriptive information in tourism: Information based mainly on mental images that a tourist may pick up from sources around him, such as TV programmes, magazines or stories from friends. It is about the atmosphere and general impression of a place.">descriptive information</span></strong></span><span style="font-size: medium;">.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Each of the three information types mentioned here have their own starting points and their own reasons for existence. The <span class="domtooltips" title="Factual information: concrete simple data tourists try to obtain about the details of their journeys, such as flight times, road signs or what type of shoes to wear. This type of information functions as an intermediary in tourist  actor-networks.">factual information</span> has to be gathered by the tourist himself, <span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">target information</span> is directed to the tourist, while <span class="domtooltips" title="Descriptive information in tourism: Information based mainly on mental images that a tourist may pick up from sources around him, such as TV programmes, magazines or stories from friends. It is about the atmosphere and general impression of a place.">descriptive information</span> just lingers around the tourist who can make use of it or not. Each of these three types of information are different, and among other things this means that when they are mixed up, the receiver may be misled.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     When a tourist has decided he wants to go to China for his next holiday, he may consider passing by the local travel store to get information about flights, package deals or hotels. At this point we are entering slightly turbulent waters, because although the case may sound simple, the information the tourist gets from the travel store has a complicated structure. The tourist wants to have some </span><span style="font-size: medium;">factual </span><span style="font-size: medium;">information and possibly some </span><span style="font-size: medium;">descriptive</span><span style="font-size: medium;"> information, but what he gets as an answer instead is </span><span style="font-size: medium;">target</span><span style="font-size: medium;"> information. The travel agent may indicate that on a given day there is only one possible flight to Peking for a certain price. This sounds like <span class="domtooltips" title="Factual information: concrete simple data tourists try to obtain about the details of their journeys, such as flight times, road signs or what type of shoes to wear. This type of information functions as an intermediary in tourist  actor-networks.">factual information</span>. However, it could very well be the case that there are more flights going, on other airline carriers, but for commercial reasons it is not in the travel agent’s interest to offer them. It looks like <span class="domtooltips" title="Factual information: concrete simple data tourists try to obtain about the details of their journeys, such as flight times, road signs or what type of shoes to wear. This type of information functions as an intermediary in tourist  actor-networks.">factual information</span>, but it is <span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">target information</span>, dressed up differently. Obviously, one may not differ too much from another, since on the Internet nowadays it is easy to verify things. The three types of information are not the same and the tourist must try to differentiate them.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Let’s take a look at another example: a tourist reads a scientific article about snakes on the Internet. We assume that this article is really interesting for biologists, but the average tourist may draw wrong conclusions, deciding not to risk taking holidays in tropical areas anymore. What is <span class="domtooltips" title="Factual information: concrete simple data tourists try to obtain about the details of their journeys, such as flight times, road signs or what type of shoes to wear. This type of information functions as an intermediary in tourist  actor-networks.">factual information</span> for one person may be <span class="domtooltips" title="Descriptive information in tourism: Information based mainly on mental images that a tourist may pick up from sources around him, such as TV programmes, magazines or stories from friends. It is about the atmosphere and general impression of a place.">descriptive information</span> for another, with all the consequences of the case.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Travel guides like the Lonely Planet or others generally deliver reliable <span class="domtooltips" title="Factual information: concrete simple data tourists try to obtain about the details of their journeys, such as flight times, road signs or what type of shoes to wear. This type of information functions as an intermediary in tourist  actor-networks.">factual information</span>. However, on the level of <span class="domtooltips" title="Descriptive information in tourism: Information based mainly on mental images that a tourist may pick up from sources around him, such as TV programmes, magazines or stories from friends. It is about the atmosphere and general impression of a place.">descriptive information</span> we may wonder how good this information is. Almost without exception, these guide books have been written by people from the home countries of the tourists and not by people from the destination. The descriptive values (of impressions among others) are pictured through the eyes of someone from the same country as the tourist. The latter may pick up the ideas easily, since they are presented according to his own way of thinking, but this may stop a tourist from experiencing things independently and to be open to new impressions and other ways of viewing things. Apart from this, travel guidebooks may suffer from hidden <span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">target information</span>, by recommending a certain area where a friend has a hotel, for example.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     The three cases mentioned here all show problems regarding the </span><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong>pragmatic</strong></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> level of information and its original intention. Too often it is difficult for a tourist to value information against the springs behind it. Misunderstandings can also occur on a </span><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong>semantic</strong></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> level. As often is the case, interpretations of information on the basis of what one expects may lead to communication problems, especially when we are dealing with cultural differences between the tourist’s home country and the holiday destination. There are cases of globalized terms, such as ‘green season’, ‘tropical beaches’ or</span><span style="font-size: medium;">‘Caribbean atmosphere’, whereby anyone can fill in whatever he or she thinks about these universal phrases and in one country that may be different from another. Another example is the notion of time, which may be different among countries. Expressions such as ‘in a minute’ or ‘in a little while’ (in Spanish &#8216;</span><span style="font-size: medium;">ahorita&#8217;</span><span style="font-size: medium;">) will be interpreted by most western tourists as a time span of 10 to 15 minutes, but in Central America this may mean two hours or more. Another point regards what is considered to be comfortable or luxurious. Standards between countries may vary considerably and tourists have to take this into account.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Problems at the level of </span><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong>syntax</strong></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> may have to do with language, which can be different from the one spoken in the tourist’s home country, leading to information that is almost incomprehensible to the tourist. When describing a beach holiday in Spain, one may read: “…and today we can spend the afternoon at the lovely &#8216;</span><span style="font-size: medium;">playa&#8217;</span><span style="font-size: medium;">…” (picturing some atmosphere as part of <span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">target information</span>). If a tourist does not know that &#8216;</span><span style="font-size: medium;">playa&#8217;</span><span style="font-size: medium;"> is the Spanish word for beach, he may wonder whether he has to play some kind of game there. Other common problems at the level of syntax can occur when information is stated in miles or kilometres, Fahrenheit or Centigrade, in Euros or in Dollars.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Finally, a tourist may encounter </span><span style="font-size: medium;">problems on the </span><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong>empirical</strong></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> level; the main problem really is whether a tourist has access to the Internet or not; during his holiday this may be a problem because of bad connections or no connections at all. We have to mention here that bad connections in general (including with cell phones) may lead to the problem of noise with consequently misleading or incomplete information.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     For tourists<span style="color: #000000;">, </span></span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span class="domtooltips" title="ImpCal: Impact calories: A set of impulses absorbed by the senses, which later may be processed into an experience.">ImpCal</span> sources</span></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> and the three different types of information can be applied differently, depending on the type of holiday they have chosen. They may go for travelling in a group, individually, on wild adventures or just a relaxing holiday. Let’s examine four examples:</span></p>
<blockquote><p><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Resort Tourism</span></span><span style="font-size: medium;">:</span></p></blockquote>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     The <span class="domtooltips" title="Main Impsource: An attraction a tourist based his choice of holiday destination. The Impsource itself or the infrastructure around it is especially designed for tourists.">main <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">ImpSource</span></span> is the resort hotel itself. There are some simple and easily recognizable <span class="domtooltips" title="Side Impsource: These small Impsources have been arranged for tourists specifically and are usually located near a Main Impsource, making use of the presence of tourists in the area.">side <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span> (spa, horseback riding on the beach, golf course, big swimming pools, just to mention a few). These make it difficult for tourists to leave the premises, which means that tourists will hardly have any local impressions (<span class="domtooltips" title="Shared Impsources:  Impsources that can be used by anyone including tourists. They exist 
with or without the presence of tourists and have not been made 
especially for them.">shared <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span>) and no contact with the </span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span class="domtooltips" title="Local population: People who have the feeling of belonging to a certain place, because their family has lived there for many generations or because of personal involvement on a social and cultural-historical level.">local population</span></span></span><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="color: #000000;">.</span> <span class="domtooltips" title="Incidental Impsources: Sources for the intake of ImpCal based on sudden or accidental occurrencies.">Incidental <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">ImpSources</span></span> are unlikely to present themselves in such a controlled environment. The hotel staff will not help much in this sense either, since in most cases they are not from the local area either. This type of holiday is usually booked via a travel agent, which means that the tourist forms part of a series of active tourism networks that must ensure his quiet holiday at this resort hotel.</span></p>
<p lang="en-GB"><span style="font-size: medium;">     The information the tourist will use for this type of holiday will consist of some basic <span class="domtooltips" title="Factual information: concrete simple data tourists try to obtain about the details of their journeys, such as flight times, road signs or what type of shoes to wear. This type of information functions as an intermediary in tourist  actor-networks.">factual information</span>, such as flight details, local currency, voltage, any additional costs, the climate, etc. The <span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">target information</span> forms the bulk of information the tourist gets and usually is the main reason why the tourist selected this particular holiday. This <span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">target information</span> is dealing with concepts of relaxation, comfort, good food, many activities for children, swimming pools and an emphasis on <span class="domtooltips" title="Side Impsource: These small Impsources have been arranged for tourists specifically and are usually located near a Main Impsource, making use of the presence of tourists in the area.">side <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span> that ensure light-hearted entertainment. The social element with the other guests is also an argument used. The <span class="domtooltips" title="Descriptive information in tourism: Information based mainly on mental images that a tourist may pick up from sources around him, such as TV programmes, magazines or stories from friends. It is about the atmosphere and general impression of a place.">descriptive information</span> has to complete the dream-picture of paradisiacal beaches, tropical gardens and a perfect climate. The same holds true, by the way, for holidays on Cruise ships.</span></p>
<blockquote><p><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Group Travel</span></span><span style="font-size: medium;">:</span></p></blockquote>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     This type of journey usually involves some well known <span class="domtooltips" title="Main Impsource: An attraction a tourist based his choice of holiday destination. The Impsource itself or the infrastructure around it is especially designed for tourists.">main <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span> (highlights) and provides for possible visits to <span class="domtooltips" title="Side Impsource: These small Impsources have been arranged for tourists specifically and are usually located near a Main Impsource, making use of the presence of tourists in the area.">side <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span>. Hotels are quite comfortable, which often means there is a fair number of hotel staff from outside the region. The number of <span class="domtooltips" title="Shared Impsources:  Impsources that can be used by anyone including tourists. They exist 
with or without the presence of tourists and have not been made 
especially for them.">shared <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span> is limited. Every day the group drives through the country, enjoying the views, landscapes and villages. There is a new tendency to visit local schools or even visit local people at home in an attempt to increase <span class="domtooltips" title="ImpCal: Impact calories: A set of impulses absorbed by the senses, which later may be processed into an experience.">ImpCal</span> intake from <span class="domtooltips" title="Shared Impsources:  Impsources that can be used by anyone including tourists. They exist 
with or without the presence of tourists and have not been made 
especially for them.">shared <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span>. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     <span class="domtooltips" title="Factual information: concrete simple data tourists try to obtain about the details of their journeys, such as flight times, road signs or what type of shoes to wear. This type of information functions as an intermediary in tourist  actor-networks.">Factual information</span> the average tourist will ask for is pretty basic, </span><span style="font-size: medium;">especially since the tourists are travelling in a group with an experienced tour guide who can provide any <span class="domtooltips" title="Factual information: concrete simple data tourists try to obtain about the details of their journeys, such as flight times, road signs or what type of shoes to wear. This type of information functions as an intermediary in tourist  actor-networks.">factual information</span> needed.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     In this case too, <span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">target information</span> plays a very important role, because this way of travelling is nearly always organized by a tour operator. These organisations form part of series of networks with local agents, hotels and transport companies. The <span class="domtooltips" title="Descriptive information in tourism: Information based mainly on mental images that a tourist may pick up from sources around him, such as TV programmes, magazines or stories from friends. It is about the atmosphere and general impression of a place.">descriptive information</span> will have played its part at the time the tourist made up his mind about which holiday destination to choose and </span><span style="font-size: medium;">it may have come from many different sources. Nevertheless the influence from this type of information will probably be limited, because the decision to travel in a group means that the tourist has a certain interest in his fellow passengers, and he does not choose this type of holiday because of the typical local atmosphere he wants to <span class="domtooltips" title="Experiences: in tourism this concerns the moment of experiencing, whereby personal values are added to sensory intake (impact calories or Impcal), forming a nucleus in our memory to be used subsequently for the comparison with other experiences.">experience</span>. In the latter case he would have selected the following type of travelling.</span></p>
<blockquote><p><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Travelling individually</span></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> (comfort):</span></p></blockquote>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Depending on what the tourist wants, his holiday will consist of a series of main and <span class="domtooltips" title="Side Impsource: These small Impsources have been arranged for tourists specifically and are usually located near a Main Impsource, making use of the presence of tourists in the area.">side <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span>. Besides, there are the <span class="domtooltips" title="Shared Impsources:  Impsources that can be used by anyone including tourists. They exist 
with or without the presence of tourists and have not been made 
especially for them.">shared <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span> that are important because he is travelling through the countryside every day. The <span class="domtooltips" title="Incidental Impsources: Sources for the intake of ImpCal based on sudden or accidental occurrencies.">incidental <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span> (just the positive ones, we hope….) may also form an important part, but this always depends on the extent tourists are open to them.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     <span class="domtooltips" title="Factual information: concrete simple data tourists try to obtain about the details of their journeys, such as flight times, road signs or what type of shoes to wear. This type of information functions as an intermediary in tourist  actor-networks.">Factual information</span> plays an important </span><span style="font-size: medium;">role since the tourist must find his way on his own. He therefore needs not only the standard <span class="domtooltips" title="Factual information: concrete simple data tourists try to obtain about the details of their journeys, such as flight times, road signs or what type of shoes to wear. This type of information functions as an intermediary in tourist  actor-networks.">factual information</span> of the country, but also the specific details inherent to travelling in that country on his own. <span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">Target information</span> depends to what extent the tourist has booked things in advance. It is often the case that a tourist studies <span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">target information</span> but does not make use of the services offered by the providers (the tourist doesn’t hook into their network). <span class="domtooltips" title="Descriptive information in tourism: Information based mainly on mental images that a tourist may pick up from sources around him, such as TV programmes, magazines or stories from friends. It is about the atmosphere and general impression of a place.">Descriptive information</span> is important for this type of tourist or holiday, because it can steer the tourist who has selected where to go while issues such as the atmosphere of a place will be taken into account.</span></p>
<blockquote><p><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Backpackers</span></span><span style="font-size: medium;">:</span></p></blockquote>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     This is a</span><span style="font-size: medium;"> totally different type of tourism whereby main and <span class="domtooltips" title="Side Impsource: These small Impsources have been arranged for tourists specifically and are usually located near a Main Impsource, making use of the presence of tourists in the area.">side <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span> are completely ignored, as a rule. First of all, backpackers depend on <span class="domtooltips" title="Incidental Impsources: Sources for the intake of ImpCal based on sudden or accidental occurrencies.">incidental <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span> and obviously they will have a fair share of <span class="domtooltips" title="Shared Impsources:  Impsources that can be used by anyone including tourists. They exist 
with or without the presence of tourists and have not been made 
especially for them.">shared <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span>. <span class="domtooltips" title="Factual information: concrete simple data tourists try to obtain about the details of their journeys, such as flight times, road signs or what type of shoes to wear. This type of information functions as an intermediary in tourist  actor-networks.">Factual information</span> plays an important part and will be gathered mostly at the destination. <span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">Target information</span> is nearly zero while the <span class="domtooltips" title="Descriptive information in tourism: Information based mainly on mental images that a tourist may pick up from sources around him, such as TV programmes, magazines or stories from friends. It is about the atmosphere and general impression of a place.">descriptive information</span> will be important when the backpacker is deciding where to go, especially information stemming from fellow backpackers. The character of a certain place is important for this type of tourist, as is social contact with fellow <span class="domtooltips" title="Travellers: In contrast to tourists, the traveller has to go somewhere for an obligatory reason. Until the second half of the 20th century there hardly was a clear distinction between tourists and travellers.">travellers</span> or locals.</span></p>
<blockquote>
<p lang="en-GB"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Information and Expectations</strong></span></span></p>
</blockquote>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     When thinking about what to do for his next holiday, the potential tourist will start to build up his </span><span style="color: #7030a0;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="color: #000000;">expectatio</span>n</span></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> patterns little-by-little, which will then be fed along the way with more information. It is about developing ideas about possible destinations, what there is to do (</span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span></span><span style="font-size: medium;"><span style="color: #000000;">)</span>, hotel options or different means of transport (</span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;">infrastructure</span></span><span style="font-size: medium;">). Depending on the amount of time one has for holiday preparation, the potential tourist starts to build a picture of what he wants to do or to see, and what he expects. Additionally, most tourists want to make sure they get to see what there is to be seen. The tourist does not arrive at a holiday destination as a blank sheet of paper; to the contrary. Not only are his own </span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span class="domtooltips" title="Referential frameworks: When processing ImpCal, the brain uses, among others, a person’s referential frameworks, which relates to the capacity of a human being to be able to associate. Furthermore, all social and cultural norms and values with which we manipulate any input are also part of it.">referential frameworks</span></span></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> and cultural and social behaviour patterns being taken to the holiday destination, his mind has been fed to a certain extent (some tourists more than others) with the fruits of factual, target and <span class="domtooltips" title="Descriptive information in tourism: Information based mainly on mental images that a tourist may pick up from sources around him, such as TV programmes, magazines or stories from friends. It is about the atmosphere and general impression of a place.">descriptive information</span>. The blank page was already filled out with remarks, opinions, <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span>, facts or views.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Studying available tourist information will help the tourist set certain expectation patterns. Expectations are based on <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span> and in turn an image is a simplification of reality. The latter is complex and cannot be caught in just one image. In the case of <span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">target information</span>, specific selected <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span> are used in an effort to give an idea of reality. In this image, something (an <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsource</span> for example) is being reduced to its most important characteristics. This selection must have a purpose or direction and must connect with a target group. However, the image should not deviate too much from reality, because that could create expectations that would have to be fulfilled in order to avoid possible disappointment with the tourists.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">Images</span> can be divided into </span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong>material</strong></span></span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;"> <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span></span></span><span style="font-size: medium;">, such as photographs, films or Web pages, and </span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong>mental</strong></span></span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;"> <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span></span></span><span style="font-size: medium;">, which are related to a person’s <span class="domtooltips" title="Referential frameworks: When processing ImpCal, the brain uses, among others, a person’s referential frameworks, which relates to the capacity of a human being to be able to associate. Furthermore, all social and cultural norms and values with which we manipulate any input are also part of it.">referential frameworks</span> and earlier experiences. <span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">Target information</span> uses <span class="domtooltips" title="Material images: Images as part of target information in tourism. These images relate to tangible objects or phenomena.">material <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span></span> primarily, while <span class="domtooltips" title="Descriptive information in tourism: Information based mainly on mental images that a tourist may pick up from sources around him, such as TV programmes, magazines or stories from friends. It is about the atmosphere and general impression of a place.">descriptive information</span> relates more to <span class="domtooltips" title="Mental images: Images as part of descriptive information based on atmosphere, ‘total picture’ and general impressions of a place.">mental <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span></span>. Tourists build up particular knowledge of a destination (<span class="domtooltips" title="Material images: Images as part of target information in tourism. These images relate to tangible objects or phenomena.">material <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span></span>, <span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">target information</span>) and on the other hand they have certain associations with the place (<span class="domtooltips" title="Mental images: Images as part of descriptive information based on atmosphere, ‘total picture’ and general impressions of a place.">mental <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span></span>, <span class="domtooltips" title="Descriptive information in tourism: Information based mainly on mental images that a tourist may pick up from sources around him, such as TV programmes, magazines or stories from friends. It is about the atmosphere and general impression of a place.">descriptive information</span>). </span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div id="attachment_1445" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://www.tourismtheories.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/foto-5A.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-1445" title="foto 5A" src="http://www.tourismtheories.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/foto-5A-300x224.jpg" alt="Ganghes eng" width="300" height="224" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text"><span class="domtooltips" title="Descriptive information in tourism: Information based mainly on mental images that a tourist may pick up from sources around him, such as TV programmes, magazines or stories from friends. It is about the atmosphere and general impression of a place.">Descriptive information</span> through an image: life in India near the Ganghes River as a perfect setting for creating a mental image.</p></div>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Internal sources a person has can be drawn from parts of the memory. When a tourist thinks of going to Patagonia in Argentina, <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span> of penguins or glaciers</span><span style="font-size: medium;"> may come to mind, some may have read Paul Theroux’s </span><span style="font-size: medium;">The Patagonia Express</span><span style="font-size: medium;"> while others may have seen a car rally on TV. Many parts of our memory may have stored <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span> or information and when trying to compile all one knows about a destination, the memory drags all the info to one place. We are talking about the initial phase of forming expectations for a particular holiday.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     One</span><span style="font-size: medium;"> interesting phenomenon is the interaction between what a tourist wants to see, what is shown to him that he should see, and what reality can offer. In this sense the concept of &#8216;</span><span style="font-size: medium;">tourist gaze&#8217;</span><span style="font-size: medium;"> has been developed (Urry, 1990). This is about the way an <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsource</span> (for example) is illustrated (selection and simplification of <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span>) in combination with the way the tourist looks at it. A tourist gaze can latch onto globalizing concepts such as the Caribbean atmosphere, or choose a completely different line of approach using a cultural or historical angle. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     The gaze invites tourists to look at things in a </span><span style="font-size: medium;">certain way and it therefore deals with the symbolic framing of an object or phenomenon with a clear target. Those who are inviting the tourists are the actors involved in one or more tourist networks. They may be tour operators or agents in a government tourist information office. Entities that want to incorporate tourists into their networks invite potential tourists to look at an <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsource</span> from a certain angle, assuming that this way of looking coincides with what the tourist is looking for. The tourist is shown an image that contains recognizable elements that he can mirror himself in. This symbolic framing as part of the tourist gaze is mainly handled by the countries of origin of western tourists.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     In the case of the city of Granada in Nicaragua, the idea is to emphasize its cultural and historical background (as the oldest Spanish town in Latin America). <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">Images</span> of old churches and other edifices give life to this particular gaze. One tour operator describes a stay in Granada as follows: “A lovely place to hang around lazily, wooed by a refreshing breeze and to absorb the colourful local life and the charming colonial architecture.” Costa Rica adopted the idea of being nature-minded (as far as the tourist gaze is concerned) supported by the campaign slogan of “No Artificial Ingredients” with <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span> of pristine rivers, empty beaches and green forests. Even though we are dealing here with general abstract concepts, this is still all about <span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">target information</span> and the formation of <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span>. These symbolic transformations of reality are generally directed at the western tourist. It should be clear that with the presentation of a limited number of <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span> there are many things and phenomena at a destination that are </span><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong>not</strong></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> mentioned. In Costa Rica, the ways of life of the indigenous populations or the beauty of the geological landscape are not presented and will therefore hardly be noticed by tourists.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     The selection and simplification of <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span> must answer questions regarding what things or phenomena they refer to, what can be said about them, and how this information is being presented.</span></p>
<blockquote><p><span style="font-size: medium;"><strong>A <span class="domtooltips" title="Tourist attraction: Also called an Impsource. There are in this case main or side Impsources.">tourist attraction</span> can be viewed as the relationship with its visitors, the object of phenomenon itself and the image presented of it. </strong></span></p></blockquote>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     This holds true for main and <span class="domtooltips" title="Side Impsource: These small Impsources have been arranged for tourists specifically and are usually located near a Main Impsource, making use of the presence of tourists in the area.">side <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span> only because <span class="domtooltips" title="Shared Impsources:  Impsources that can be used by anyone including tourists. They exist 
with or without the presence of tourists and have not been made 
especially for them.">shared <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span> do not have a directedness or image, since they form part of the locals’ daily life. If the locals were to dress up just for tourists, they would become a <span class="domtooltips" title="Tourist attraction: Also called an Impsource. There are in this case main or side Impsources.">tourist attraction</span> in their own right, but when locals walk around in the same clothing as always, this might still be interesting for tourists (Guatemala!) but there is a lack of direction toward tourists and the <span class="domtooltips" title="Local population: People who have the feeling of belonging to a certain place, because their family has lived there for many generations or because of personal involvement on a social and cultural-historical level.">local population</span> remains authentic.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Travel books may indicate that a certain village is quite picturesque (<span class="domtooltips" title="Descriptive information in tourism: Information based mainly on mental images that a tourist may pick up from sources around him, such as TV programmes, magazines or stories from friends. It is about the atmosphere and general impression of a place.">descriptive information</span> – picturesque from the tourist</span><span style="font-size: medium;">’s point of view) or that on Saturdays there is such a colourful market. It is up to the tourist to use this information. However, most <span class="domtooltips" title="Shared Impsources:  Impsources that can be used by anyone including tourists. They exist 
with or without the presence of tourists and have not been made 
especially for them.">shared <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span> and obviously all <span class="domtooltips" title="Incidental Impsources: Sources for the intake of ImpCal based on sudden or accidental occurrencies.">incidental <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span> were not expected by the tourist beforehand. The tourist staying at an all-inclusive resort hotel will hardly <span class="domtooltips" title="Experiences: in tourism this concerns the moment of experiencing, whereby personal values are added to sensory intake (impact calories or Impcal), forming a nucleus in our memory to be used subsequently for the comparison with other experiences.">experience</span> any shared or <span class="domtooltips" title="Incidental Impsources: Sources for the intake of ImpCal based on sudden or accidental occurrencies.">incidental <span class="domtooltips" title="Impsource: A place with or without tourism infrastructure, where the tourist can have the intake of ImpCal.">Impsources</span></span>. The tourist cruising the country in his rental car will have contact with the <span class="domtooltips" title="Local population: People who have the feeling of belonging to a certain place, because their family has lived there for many generations or because of personal involvement on a social and cultural-historical level.">local population</span> every day and will <span class="domtooltips" title="Experiences: in tourism this concerns the moment of experiencing, whereby personal values are added to sensory intake (impact calories or Impcal), forming a nucleus in our memory to be used subsequently for the comparison with other experiences.">experience</span> things unknown to him beforehand. It may be clear that this depends to what extent a tourist is keen on encounters and is open to things that are new to him or different. Sometimes it is not always clear what <span class="domtooltips" title="ImpCal: Impact calories: A set of impulses absorbed by the senses, which later may be processed into an experience.">ImpCal</span> the tourists absorb or how this is processed. Poor huts may be seen by tourist as “typical little houses of the area” or the mist in a cloud forest may receive a comment about the amount of smog.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     At the receiving end of a message there may be another type of problem. Not all tourists have travelled a lot and there still are many of them who have never been on an airplane. There are even more tourists who have never strolled through a tropical forest or canoed in wild rivers. There are many experiences we may have read about or seen on TV, but we still can hardly imagine what they are like. There are countries or regions, landscapes or types of people that do not mean anything to us, due to our lack of </span><span style="color: #000000;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><span class="domtooltips" title="Referential frameworks: When processing ImpCal, the brain uses, among others, a person’s referential frameworks, which relates to the capacity of a human being to be able to associate. Furthermore, all social and cultural norms and values with which we manipulate any input are also part of it.">referential frameworks</span></span></span><span style="font-size: medium;"> or <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span> in our memory. The only thing we can do in those cases is to take the presented <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span> and promised experiences (<span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">target information</span>) as <span class="domtooltips" title="Factual information: concrete simple data tourists try to obtain about the details of their journeys, such as flight times, road signs or what type of shoes to wear. This type of information functions as an intermediary in tourist  actor-networks.">factual information</span>. If an area is presented as a paradise for birders but we lack references for what this means, we may expect to see hundreds of birds at any moment of the day and we complain if this is not the case. The <span class="domtooltips" title="Material images: Images as part of target information in tourism. These images relate to tangible objects or phenomena.">material <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span></span> (a simplification of reality) are taken as facts (reality). The same holds true for <span class="domtooltips" title="Mental images: Images as part of descriptive information based on atmosphere, ‘total picture’ and general impressions of a place.">mental <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span></span>. The Caribbean atmosphere may mean something to many of us, but those who do not know anything about the tropics will draw the logical conclusion that this atmosphere can only be found near the Caribbean Sea, otherwise this would be incorrect. Many tourists do not possess the necessary referential material to relate to certain <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span> or have a gaze, in which case the image of the Caribbean atmosphere does not receive a response and cannot be mirrored with existing <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span> in our memory. The tourist gaze taken literally does not work.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     This is a well known problem among travel organisations: <span class="domtooltips" title="Descriptive information in tourism: Information based mainly on mental images that a tourist may pick up from sources around him, such as TV programmes, magazines or stories from friends. It is about the atmosphere and general impression of a place.">descriptive information</span> may be taken literally, <span class="domtooltips" title="Mental images: Images as part of descriptive information based on atmosphere, ‘total picture’ and general impressions of a place.">mental <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span></span> </span><span style="font-size: medium;">may be confused with material ones, and the message is not received on a pragmatic or semantic level. The direct result is translated into complaining tourists and the question of who is to blame: the travel organisation, who assumes that most tourists have sufficient referential material to mirror internally the <span class="domtooltips" title="Images: used in tourism as  a simplification of reality: an object or phenomenon is reduced to its most important characteristic.">images</span> presented or the potential tourist who, by lack of <span class="domtooltips" title="Experiences: in tourism this concerns the moment of experiencing, whereby personal values are added to sensory intake (impact calories or Impcal), forming a nucleus in our memory to be used subsequently for the comparison with other experiences.">experience</span>, does not know how to handle <span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">target information</span>. This raises the question whether it is a good idea for these tourists to go to destinations they know nothing about while travel organizations may wonder how to target their public more accurately.</span></p>
<blockquote><p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><span style="font-size: medium;">Social Information</span></strong></span></p></blockquote>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     Three types of information have been introduced that are most useful in tourism: <span class="domtooltips" title="Factual information: concrete simple data tourists try to obtain about the details of their journeys, such as flight times, road signs or what type of shoes to wear. This type of information functions as an intermediary in tourist  actor-networks.">factual information</span>, <span class="domtooltips" title="Target information: Information for tourists provided by entities that have an interest to incorporate a tourist within their network. The most common form of information provision is stemming from travel organizations.">target information</span> and <span class="domtooltips" title="Descriptive information in tourism: Information based mainly on mental images that a tourist may pick up from sources around him, such as TV programmes, magazines or stories from friends. It is about the atmosphere and general impression of a place.">descriptive information</span>. However, in light of the aforementioned tendencies, there is a fourth type of information of growing interest to tourism: social information as a result of Social Information Seeking (SIS). In recent years there have been a fast growing number of sites where people can ask questions and they are answered by groups of people or communities. One of the early examples is the site ‘Answerbag’ and since then more have sprung up – Yahoo!Answer being one of the most popular, so it seems.</span></p>
<p lang="en-US"><span style="font-size: medium;">     The basic idea is quite similar to the Wiki concept, of which Wikipedia is the most famous. Generally, a site consists of 4 parts: a mechanism whereby people can submit questions, a venue for submitting answers, the community built around this information exchange, and finally answers are indexed for search engines, thus enabling web users to find answers given to previously asked questions in response to new queries. This can be on world level or limited to specific groups of people with a common interest (communities). The term community is used here in the broadest sense of the word and those sites are called cQA sites. These kinds of sites began to appear on the Internet in 2003 and they have been a growing phenomenon ever since. Apart from this, there was already a tendency for people to ask for information via the Internet, rather than trying to find it themselves. An ever increasing number of people seem to think “why bother seeking an answer when the Internet can connect me with the people who have it?” On forums and similar communication platforms the habit of asking questions is also growing quickly.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">     The possibilities for those interested in tourism are enormous and cQA sites may provide a necessary link between (pre-) tourists and the people from a destination or local community. Due to the fast-growing influences of the various Internet applications that provide people with information and the tools for acquiring specific data such as Search Engine Optimization (SEO) techniques, potential tourists can find a lot more information directly on the Internet and the additional cQA sites carry the concepts even further along a new route of social information exchange. Obviously this refers not only to tourism, but to the world in general.</span></p>
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