Publication | Closed Access
Nature/Person Transactions During An Outdoor Adventure Experience: A Multi-Phasic Analysis
141
Citations
28
References
1998
Year
Leisure StudyTourist ExperienceActivity-travel PatternEnvironmental PsychologyCultural TourismSocial SciencesPsychologyBuilt EnvironmentEnvironmental BehaviorOutdoor Adventure ExperienceRecreationAdventure Recreation ExperienceHealth SciencesAbstractfew StudiesBehavioral SciencesUser ExperienceEnvironmental HistoryExtraordinary Nature ExperiencePerformance StudiesTourismMultimodal Travel BehaviorAnthropologyOutdoor Recreation Resource ManagementCultural Anthropology
AbstractFew studies have addressed the changing nature of adventure recreation experience as it unfolds during the activity. This study explores a black-water rafting trip through a cave by examining person/nature transactions at selected points in the journey and by analyzing participants' post-trip written accounts about the experience. Key variables used to define the person-nature transaction included focus of attention, mood states, and perceptions of risk and competence. Study results indicated that each of these variables varied with environmental context. However, broad patterns of variation in these same variables were also evident across time and phase of the experience. In their personal accounts, participants in this extraordinary nature experience expressed many of the values that western cultures have attributed to natural places.KEYWORDS: Adventure recreationperson/nature transactionsmoodsexperiential samplingpersonal accounts
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