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Publication


Featured researches published by Taketo Naoi.


Tourism Analysis | 2009

Evaluating Historical Districts: exploring the use of photographs and slide experiments

Taketo Naoi; David Airey; Shoji Iijima

This study explores approaches and methods to investigate visitors’ evaluation of historical districts. Personal interviews with use of Repertory Grid Analysis and Laddering Analysis and slide experiments with photographs were conducted with a sample of students to reveal relationships between various evaluative components. The results of the two sets of methods are examined in a comparative manner to obtain abundant insights into evaluations of historical districts and the efficacy of these methods. The results provide insights into issues raised by past studies. Particularly, they shed light on the complex nature of visitors’ evaluation of historical districts, as represented by the mixed effects of the presence of other people, commercialisation and modernity. Personal interviews and slide experiments are found to be mutually complementary in that, while the former illuminate the complex relationships between components of subjects’ evaluations, the latter depict these relationships in a more holistic and simple form by uncovering the commonality between the elicited components. The findings of the slide experiments also suggest room for further attempts to elicit evaluative components. Further studies of this kind with different groups of subjects and in different field settings would provide further insights into this complex area.


Journal of Travel & Tourism Marketing | 2016

The effects of Westerners' presence on Japanese evaluations of a historic district: the case of Takayama City.

Akihiro Araya; Taketo Naoi; Shoji Iijima

ABSTRACT This study examined the effects the presence of Westerners at historic districts in Japan has on Japanese evaluations of the districts. Sixty-three Japanese students rated 18 slide photographs with no people, photographs with mainly Japanese, and photographs with mainly Westerners. The presence of Westerners had positive effects on the subjects’ overall evaluations of the districts regarding a sense of activity and touristic uniqueness. Negative effects were found regarding a sense of calmness and harmony. These results imply the importance of the characteristics of tourist attractions and of the observable characteristics of foreign tourists for tourism promotion in historic districts.


Archive | 2017

The Gaze and Objectives of Townscape Visitors

Taketo Naoi; Akira Soshiroda; Shoji Iijima

Abstract This study elucidates the relationships between the elements that visitors gaze at in a historical district and the objectives perceived to have been achieved. This study differs from previous studies on visitors’ evaluations of historical districts (carried out using the theoretical frameworks and methods of architectural/environmental psychology), because the research focuses on interpersonal differences in tourist gazes. Research was conducted between 09:30 and 14:00 on July 13, 2013 in front of the railway station, near the tourist information center in Sanmachi, and around the entrance to and in the waiting room of Takayama Jinya. One thousand visitors to Takayama city, Japan were asked to complete and return questionnaires, using stamped, pre-addressed envelopes. They were first asked whether they had seen 19 elements, and then asked to rate the impressiveness of those they had seen. Respondents also rated the extent to which seven objectives related to learning and interaction had been achieved during their visits. The findings suggest that visitors who gaze at various elements may strongly perceive opportunities to achieve their objectives, that is, learning about a destination and interacting with other people. For visitors who specifically focus on local elements that do not relate to people, opportunities for learning may not be curtailed, but then again, the chances to interact with others may not necessarily be facilitated. Gazing at the multifaceted aspects of a historical district appears to foster a visitor’s understanding of the district. Drawing upon these findings, future studies should investigate the effects of visitors’ pretravel motives on their gaze.


Archive | 2015

Local Students’ Perceptions of Spaces for Tourists and Locals in a Shopping District: Photo-Based Research

Taketo Naoi; Shoji Iijima; Akira Soshiroda; Tetsuo Shimizu

Abstract This study aims to identify the elements that characterise spaces for tourists and those that characterise spaces for locals in a shopping district based on the perspectives of local students. Forty-five local undergraduates took photographs of settings that impressed them in the shopping district in Naha-shi, Okinawa Prefecture, Japan, and the reasons given by each respondent for photographing a particular setting were recorded. Frequently used nouns and adjectives were extracted for each category. The results suggest the importance of the types of commercial facilities and people on the perspectives of locals. Affordable and mundane products are associated with local spaces, while souvenirs may be regarded as symbols of touristic spaces. The absence of locals and the presence of tourists may be characteristics of touristic spaces whereas the potential attractiveness of encounters with locals for tourists is also implied.


Tourism Management | 2006

Visitors' evaluation of an historical district: Repertory Grid Analysis and Laddering Analysis with photographs.

Taketo Naoi; David Airey; Shoji Iijima; Outi Niininen


Tourism Management | 2011

Applying the caption evaluation method to studies of visitors’ evaluation of historical districts

Taketo Naoi; Takanobu Yamada; Shoji Iijima; Takayuki Kumazawa


Journal of Business Research | 2007

Towards a theory of visitors' evaluation of historical districts as tourism destinations: Frameworks and methods

Taketo Naoi; David Airey; Shoji Iijima; Outi Niininen


Archive | 2007

Chapter 11 Advancing and Testing Theories of How Visitors Assess Historical Districts as Tourism Destinations with Use of Repertory Grid Analysis and Laddering Analysis

Taketo Naoi; David Airey; Shoji Iijima; Outi Niininen


Archive | 2018

Potential visitors’ evaluations of photographs of destinations with volcanoes

Ryota Nakamata; Taketo Naoi; Shoji Iijima


Archive | 2017

The effects of touristic elements in photographs on potential visitors’ evaluations of a volcano

Ryota Nakamata; Taketo Naoi; Shoji Iijima

Collaboration


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Shoji Iijima

Okayama Shoka University

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Takanobu Yamada

Okayama Prefectural University

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Takayuki Kumazawa

Okayama Prefectural University

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Yohei Kurata

Tokyo Metropolitan University

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Takashi Tsutsumi

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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