Ben Haobin Ye
South China Normal University
33 Papers
18 Citations
Ben Haobin Ye is an academic researcher from South China Normal University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tourism & Customer satisfaction. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 30 publications. Previous affiliations of Ben Haobin Ye include Hong Kong Polytechnic University & Sun Yat-sen University.
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Papers
Hotel employee's artificial intelligence and robotics awareness and its impact on turnover intention: The moderating roles of perceived organizational support and competitive psychological climate
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present new empirical findings on this issue using data from a sample of 468 full-time five-star hotel employees in Guangzhou, China, and find that AI and robotics awareness was significantly associated with employee turnover intention.
506
Exploring the travel behaviors of inbound tourists to Hong Kong using geotagged photos
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a new approach to this task by exploiting the socially generated and user-contributed geotagged photos now made publicly available on the Internet, focusing on Hong Kong inbound tourism using 29,443 photos collected from 2100 tourists.
362
The impact of servicescape on hedonic value and behavioral intentions: The importance of previous experience
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the multi-dimensional structure of the hotel servicescape to understand its impact on customer's behavioral intentions through multidimensional perceived hedonic value.
245
Reality TV, audience travel intentions, and destination image
TL;DR: In this paper, the relationship and intervening mechanisms between audience involvement and tourist behavioral intentions were examined, and it was found that audience involvement influences tourists' behavioral intentions through the mediating role of cognitive and affective images.
161
Outlook of tourism recovery amid an epidemic: Importance of outbreak control by the government
TL;DR: It is found that residents anticipate quick tourism recovery when they are satisfied with the government's performance in dealing with epidemic, because of their self-efficacy in avoiding infection and government efficacy in tourism recovery, but not relief of emotional concern.
134