Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1012762 Tourism Management 2011 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper examines whether or not people with different characteristics have significantly different nonmarket preferences for longer temporary exhibitions in a cultural heritage site, using a choice modelling study. In order to perform the examination, several methods to calculate confidence intervals (the bootstrap, jackknife, Krinsky and Robb, and Delta methods), and a convolutions approach are adapted. A sample is segmented into relatively homogeneous subgroups according to their sociodemographic or attitudinal characteristics. The results from a case study show that (1) the implicit price for longer exhibitions by one month is AU$5.01 per household; (2) sociodemographic and attitudinal characteristics as segmentation criteria do not cause significantly different implicit prices; and (3) different methods of testing the relationship between mean WTP estimates did not lead to different conclusions.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Strategy and Management
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