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Fifty years for Plog's psychographic theory: lessons of replication and validity for tourist behaviour research
Ashkelon Acad Coll, Israel.
Linnaeus University, School of Business and Economics. University of Canterbury, New Zealand;University of Oulu, Finland;Taylors University, Malaysia;University of Johannesburg, South Africa.ORCID iD: 0000-0002-7734-4587
2025 (English)In: Current Issues in Tourism, ISSN 1368-3500, E-ISSN 1747-7603Article in journal (Refereed) Epub ahead of print
Abstract [en]

Plog's psychographic theory was developed to analyse tourist behaviour. The present study examines this theory as Plog's psychographic theory reaches its 50th anniversary. Replication is one of the most acceptable ways to assess scientific quality and reliability. Using categories of replications, the study systematically screened the citations of Plog (1974, 2001, 2002) from the Scopus database (n = 1185) of referred academic works and analysed its 34 replications (1991-2023). The findings of this consecutive replication analysis showed 23.5% support for Plog's theory alongside various validity and reliability issues in replicating papers. The segmentation of people was found to be relatively more replicable. Based on these findings, four lessons for tourist behaviour scholars were set: to adopt updated theories and perspectives, maintain and report reliability measures, conduct replication studies, and borrow data but not models from practitioners.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Taylor & Francis Group, 2025.
Keywords [en]
Replication, psychographics, Plog, pioneer effect, construct validity
National Category
Business Administration
Research subject
Tourism Studies
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:lnu:diva-136990DOI: 10.1080/13683500.2025.2459815ISI: 001414964300001Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85217180049OAI: oai:DiVA.org:lnu-136990DiVA, id: diva2:1940130
Available from: 2025-02-25 Created: 2025-02-25 Last updated: 2025-04-28

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Hall, C. Michael

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  • apa
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  • de-DE
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  • en-US
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  • nn-NO
  • nn-NB
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Output format
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  • asciidoc
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