Abstract
Electronic tour guides have been developed to personalise guided tours. Also, in contrast to traditional tours, electronic tour guides allow their users to abandon or modify tours at any time. Research as to whether users take advantage of these added capabilities is currently not available. A field trial was conducted comparing the behaviour of tourists as they were using a Planner providing a personalized guided tour and an Explorer displaying the current location in a map and supplying information about sights on request. The results indicate that users differ significantly in the way and extent to which they take advantage of both mobile applications. It seems that the Planner satisfies the demand for guided tours additionally leaving much needed room for spontaneous deviations. Surprisingly, tour duration, walking distances and number of sights visited using these different mobile applications were similar to traditional guided tours.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Keywords
References
Abowd, G. D., Atkeson C. G., Hong, J., Long, S., Kooper, R. & Pinkerton, M. (1997). Cyberguide — a mobile context-aware tour guide, Baltzer/ACM Wireless Networks.
Ashbrook, D. & Straner, T. (2003). Using GPS to learn significant locations and predict movement across multiple users. Personal Ubiquitous Computing, Springer-Verlag London Limited 2003.
Brown, B. & Chalmers, M. (2003). Tourism and mobile technology. In K. Kuutti & E. H. Karsten (Eds.) Proeceedings of the Eighth European Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work, Helsinki, Finland, 14–18 September 2003., Kluwer Academic Press.
Cheverst, K., Davies, N., Mitchell, K., Friday, A., & Efstratiou, C. (2000). Developing a Context-aware Electronic Tourist Guide: Some Issues and Experiences, Distributed Multimedia Research Group, Lancaster University, UK.
Franke, T. (2002). Integration of Group Support Tools into an Online Tourism Advising System. Workshop on User Modeling and Decision Making in Travel and Tourism Emergent Systems, Trento, April 9–10. Retrieved September 6, 2005 from http://ectrl.itc.it/home/umtts/program.htm
Freytag, T. (2003). Städtetourismus in Heidleberg — Ergebnisbericht zur Gästebefragung 2003. Geographisches Institut der Universität Heidelberg.
Kramer, R., Modsching, M., Gretzel, U., & ten Hagen, K. (2006). A Field Trial to Elicit Individual Preferences in the Context of a Mobile Dynamic Tour Guide. In M. Hitz, M. Sigala & J. Murphy (Eds.), Information and Communication Technologies in Tourism 2006. p. 100. Vienna, Austria: Springer Computer Science.
Malaka, R. (2001). Deep Map — The Multilingual Tourist Guide, European Media Laboratory, Heidelberg, Germany.
March, R. & Woodside, A. G. (2005). Tourism behaviour: travellers’ decisions and actions. Cambridge, MA: CABI Publishing.
Masthoff, J. (2004). Group modeling: Selecting a sequence of television items to suit a group of viewers. User Modeling and User Adapted Interaction, 14,37–85.
Navigon (2004): http://www.navigon.de
Pearce, P. L. (2005). Tourist Behaviour: Themes and Conceptual Schemes. Clevedon, UK: Channel View Publications.
Schmidt-Belz, B., Laamanen, H., Posland, S, & Zipf, A. (2003). Location-based mobile tourist service — first user experiences. In A. Frew, M. Hizt & P. O’Connor (Eds.), Information and Communication Technologies in Tourism 2003, 115–123. Vienna, Austria: Springer Computer Science.
Ten Hagen, K., Kramer, R., Müller, P., Schumann, B., & Hermkes, M. (2004). Semantic Matching and Heuristic Search for a Dynamic Tour Guide. In A. Frew, M. Hiztz & P. O’Connor (Eds.), Information and Communication Technologies in Tourism 2005. Vienna, Austria: Springer Computer Science.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2007 Springer-Verlag Wien
About this paper
Cite this paper
Kramer, R., Modsching, M., ten Hagen, K., Gretzel, U. (2007). Behavioural Impacts of Mobile Tour Guides. In: Sigala, M., Mich, L., Murphy, J. (eds) Information and Communication Technologies in Tourism 2007. Springer, Vienna. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-211-69566-1_11
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-211-69566-1_11
Publisher Name: Springer, Vienna
Print ISBN: 978-3-211-69564-7
Online ISBN: 978-3-211-69566-1