The Role of Availability Cascades in Tourism Decision-Making
Abstract
Momentum from a single tourism event can produce a pattern of mass perception.
Availability Cascades are processes of collective belief formation where natural social
learning causes individuals to incorrectly infer the probability of a proposition. The thesis
measures an individual’s level of negative affect after selecting an initial tourism choice,
seeing contradicting group judgments, and selecting a final opinion.
In the absence of confounding variables, emotions were observed to be intrinsic
incentives that completely predicted the strategies by which individuals reacted to their
social groups. Those who experienced negative affect after seeing disconfirming
opinions (p = .007) were able to assuage this emotion by conforming (p < .001). For
those who did not conform, there was an intrinsic and emotionally positive response after
observing a social group contradict their views (p =.02). Strengthening an opinion against
all social signals allowed these “non-conformers” to maintain confidence in their
personal perceptions, however, committing to this final decision increased negative affect
(p = .01). Without any direct emotional meta-data or tangible rewards for conformity,
risk-averse proportions remained stable across groups—so threats were not a factor in the
choice. This means choices were dictated by individuals’ emotional reactions to their
social groups. If future tourism research can offer insights into how to change nonconformers’
initial reactions to their social signals, then a proposition could be guided
towards collective consensus irrespective of whether the risk is perceived or real.
Citation
Mullins, Daniel L (2018). The Role of Availability Cascades in Tourism Decision-Making. Master's thesis, Texas A & M University. Available electronically from https : / /hdl .handle .net /1969 .1 /174060.