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23 pages, 3795 KB  
Article
Aligning Supply and Demand: The Evolution of Community Public Sports Facilities in Shanghai, China
by Lyu Hui and Peng Ye
Sustainability 2026, 18(3), 1209; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18031209 (registering DOI) - 24 Jan 2026
Abstract
Community public sport facilities are core carriers of the national fitness public service system, with their supply–demand alignment directly linked to megacity governance efficiency and residents’ well-being. To address structural issues, such as “human–land imbalance” in facility layout, this study uses the 2010–2024 [...] Read more.
Community public sport facilities are core carriers of the national fitness public service system, with their supply–demand alignment directly linked to megacity governance efficiency and residents’ well-being. To address structural issues, such as “human–land imbalance” in facility layout, this study uses the 2010–2024 panel data from Shanghai’s 16 districts, applies supply–demand equilibrium theory, and integrates quantitative methods to analyze spatio-temporal supply–demand coupling and identify key influencing factors. The study yields four key findings: (1) The spatial distribution of facilities and population demonstrates a differentiated evolutionary trajectory marked by “central dispersion and suburban stability”. (2) Supply–demand alignment has continuously improved, as evidenced by the increase in coordinated administrative districts from six to thirteen. Nonetheless, the distance between sports facilities and population centers widened, suggesting that spatial adaptation remains incomplete. (3) Urban population growth exerts a significant positive impact on facility supply. Elasticity coefficients are generally high in suburban areas, while negative elasticity is detected in some central urban areas due to population outflow. (4) Facility construction intensity and residential activity intensity are core driving factors, with economic conditions, transportation infrastructure, and housing prices acting as key supporting factors. This study overcomes traditional aggregate-quantity research limitations, reveals megacity facility supply–demand “spatial mismatch” dynamics, and provides a scientific basis for targeted public sports facility layout and refined governance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Health, Well-Being and Sustainability)
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21 pages, 777 KB  
Article
A Multi-Compartment Tumor–Immune Model Under Uncertain Differential Dynamics and Therapeutic Forcing
by Darshan Mal, Javed Hussain and Sultan Hussain
Mathematics 2026, 14(3), 408; https://doi.org/10.3390/math14030408 (registering DOI) - 24 Jan 2026
Abstract
A four-compartment tumor–immune interaction model is studied in a belief-based uncertain framework. The deterministic dynamics for tumor cells, natural killer cells, dendritic cells, and cytotoxic CD8+ T lymphocytes are extended to an uncertain differential system driven by a canonical Liu process, with [...] Read more.
A four-compartment tumor–immune interaction model is studied in a belief-based uncertain framework. The deterministic dynamics for tumor cells, natural killer cells, dendritic cells, and cytotoxic CD8+ T lymphocytes are extended to an uncertain differential system driven by a canonical Liu process, with therapeutic effects represented through treatment-related parameters acting on the respective populations. The analysis establishes well-posedness in the biologically relevant positive orthant under structural conditions compatible with the model nonlinearities, and it characterizes stability properties in the sense appropriate to uncertain dynamical systems. Sufficient conditions are derived for the existence of a global attracting set describing the long-time behavior of trajectories. The analytical results are complemented by numerical experiments based on α-path dynamics to illustrate uncertainty-aware therapeutic scenarios and to connect the qualitative theory with observable system behavior. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Applied Mathematical Modelling and Dynamical Systems, 2nd Edition)
26 pages, 749 KB  
Article
News Framing of Assisted Death Through Argument Structures in Portugal and the United Kingdom
by Bruno Frutuoso Costa
Journal. Media 2026, 7(1), 16; https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia7010016 (registering DOI) - 24 Jan 2026
Abstract
The news framing of assisted death in Portugal and the United Kingdom from 2016 to 2024 was analyzed across two dimensions. The first examined the overall frames through source positions and occupations. The second observed argumentative structures by coding argument characteristics: manifestation, origin, [...] Read more.
The news framing of assisted death in Portugal and the United Kingdom from 2016 to 2024 was analyzed across two dimensions. The first examined the overall frames through source positions and occupations. The second observed argumentative structures by coding argument characteristics: manifestation, origin, level, and evaluation. A total of 7464 structures were identified from 1731 published stories in Expresso, Público, The Guardian, and The Telegraph. The research utilized a methodological framework based on framing theory, creating direct connections between frame analysis and argumentative structures to improve the validity of valence and thematic framing mechanisms. The findings indicated significant differences between countries. The Portuguese news media showed a marked inclination to present concentrated opposing arguments with a higher argumentative density. In contrast, British newspapers displayed a greater diversity of arguments in favor of assisted death, along with a more cohesive representation among pro-assisted death sources. Three distinct argumentative profiles were identified, each showing different divisions between Portugal and the UK. These results reveal that argumentative structures in assisted death coverage reflect deeper systemic values and news media structures, positioning these quality newspapers as influential actors in representing arguments about moral legitimacy around bioethical issues. The study makes a valuable contribution by offering a comprehensive understanding of how these four newspapers frame arguments about assisted death while proposing an innovative analytical model applicable to comparative studies of other news media. Full article
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16 pages, 414 KB  
Article
Research on the Supreme Deity in Daoism from the Perspective of Ancient Chinese Celestial Studies
by Min Lu
Religions 2026, 17(2), 131; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17020131 (registering DOI) - 24 Jan 2026
Abstract
The construction of Daoism’s pantheon is deeply intertwined with traditional Chinese celestial studies. From the Eastern Han to the Northern Wei dynasties, based on star worship and belief in Taiyi, Laozi was deified as the Great High Lord Lao. In the Eastern Jin, [...] Read more.
The construction of Daoism’s pantheon is deeply intertwined with traditional Chinese celestial studies. From the Eastern Han to the Northern Wei dynasties, based on star worship and belief in Taiyi, Laozi was deified as the Great High Lord Lao. In the Eastern Jin, Ge Hong drew on the Huntian theory to shape Pangu (the Primordial Heavenly King) as a creator deity, yet his status declined due to the limited Daoist immortal realm within a finite spatial category that failed to align with Daoism’s boundless concepts. The infinite cosmology and Qi Theory of the Xuanye Theory provided new theoretical support for Daoism. Building on these, the Lingbao School created the Heavenly Worthy of the Primordial Beginning and the Grand Canopy Heaven. Through subsequent integration and elaboration by various sects, the Heavenly Worthy of the Primordial Beginning established his position as the supreme deity, and the Grand Canopy Heaven gained authority, transcending finiteness. This evolutionary process demonstrates the profound influence of traditional Chinese celestial studies on the construction of Daoism’s pantheon. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Heavens and Grottos: New Explorations in Daoist Cosmography)
34 pages, 363 KB  
Review
A Comparative Analysis of International Dog Owner Education Programmes
by Hee Yong Kang and Song Yi Lee
Animals 2026, 16(3), 370; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16030370 - 23 Jan 2026
Abstract
Dogs increasingly function as relational beings, shaping their guardians’ emotional well-being and daily routines. Consequently, dog owner education has expanded beyond behaviour-focused training toward integrative approaches that address the emotional, relational, and cognitive dimensions of the human–dog relationship. Despite this shift, international comparative [...] Read more.
Dogs increasingly function as relational beings, shaping their guardians’ emotional well-being and daily routines. Consequently, dog owner education has expanded beyond behaviour-focused training toward integrative approaches that address the emotional, relational, and cognitive dimensions of the human–dog relationship. Despite this shift, international comparative research on the organisation and institutionalisation of dog owner education remains limited. The study applies a qualitative exploratory comparative case study to examine systems in the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, Japan, and Australia, identifying national patterns and shared components to inform context-appropriate frameworks, particularly in South Korea. The study examines legal and policy documents, institutional guidelines, and standardised education programmes that function as national or de facto standards using document and content analysis. It integrates within- and cross-case comparisons and interprets findings through a framework drawing on human–animal interaction, attachment, canine behaviour, and cognitive–behavioural coaching theories. The analysis reveals five shared components of behaviour change: guardian responsibility and animal welfare, science-based positive reinforcement, early socialisation and prevention, a balance between standardisation and individualisation, and guardians’ emotional and relational engagement. These findings suggest that dog owner education functions as an integrated system that supports responsible guardianship and stable human–dog relationships across sociocultural contexts. Full article
17 pages, 392 KB  
Article
Beyond Morality and Technology: The Theory of “Fate” of Wang Chong
by Xiaofei Ma
Religions 2026, 17(2), 130; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17020130 - 23 Jan 2026
Abstract
Wang Chong established the most extensive and complex theoretical system of fate in the pre-Qin and Han dynasties, drawing upon Confucian and popular theories. The cores of Confucian and popular theories of fate lay respectively in moral cultivation and technical approaches, leaving room [...] Read more.
Wang Chong established the most extensive and complex theoretical system of fate in the pre-Qin and Han dynasties, drawing upon Confucian and popular theories. The cores of Confucian and popular theories of fate lay respectively in moral cultivation and technical approaches, leaving room for human autonomy in determining fate. However, based on his own experience of unfulfilled potential and his admiration for the Daoist concept of “nature”, Wang Chong denied the causal relationship between individual behaviors and the occurrences of good or bad fortune. In this way, Wang Chong’s theory of fate deprived individuals of their initiative over destiny as found in Confucian tradition and popular beliefs, thus moving towards the extreme of fatalism. The theory of fate served as a key instrument for Wang Chong in his “opposition to falsehood and fallacy” (jixuwang 疾虚妄), occupying a significant position within the philosophical system of Lunheng. Through this theory, Wang Chong criticized the prevailing theories of the interaction between Heaven and humanity centered on moral principles, as well as the numerology and worship of ghosts and deities rooted in technical principles. In doing so, he set apart himself from traditional Confucian scholars, and laid important intellectual groundwork for the subsequent development of metaphysical discourse in China. Full article
24 pages, 355 KB  
Article
Existence Results for a Coupled System of Nabla Fractional Equations with Summation Boundary Conditions
by Nikolay D. Dimitrov and Jagan Mohan Jonnalagadda
Fractal Fract. 2026, 10(2), 76; https://doi.org/10.3390/fractalfract10020076 (registering DOI) - 23 Jan 2026
Abstract
The aim of the current manuscript is to study a coupled system of nabla fractional equations with general summation boundary conditions depending on parameters. We deduce the expression of the Green’s function and we obtain useful bounds of it. Using these bounds, under [...] Read more.
The aim of the current manuscript is to study a coupled system of nabla fractional equations with general summation boundary conditions depending on parameters. We deduce the expression of the Green’s function and we obtain useful bounds of it. Using these bounds, under suitable conditions, we obtain existence results by implying a few classical fixed point theorems. Then, we show that there exists an interval for the parameters, where the Green’s function is strictly positive, and we are able to deduce existence, nonexistence, and multiplicity results for our studied problem using the same theory. At the end of this work, we deliver some numerical examples to clarify our theoretical results. Full article
42 pages, 8456 KB  
Article
Digital Twin for Designing Logic Gates in Minecraft Through Automated Circuit Verification and Real-Time Simulation
by David Cruz García, Isabel Alonso Correa, Sergio García González, Arturo Álvarez Sánchez and Gabriel Villarrubia González
Electronics 2026, 15(3), 499; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15030499 - 23 Jan 2026
Abstract
This article presents a gamified digital twin in Minecraft designed to support practical exercises in digital logic in the Computer Engineering I course at the University of Salamanca. Implemented as a Spigot/Paper server plugin based on the Platform for Automatic coNstruction of orGanizations [...] Read more.
This article presents a gamified digital twin in Minecraft designed to support practical exercises in digital logic in the Computer Engineering I course at the University of Salamanca. Implemented as a Spigot/Paper server plugin based on the Platform for Automatic coNstruction of orGanizations of intElligent Agents (PANGEA) multi-agent architecture, the system orchestrates four virtual organizations and employs a world cloning strategy (via Multiverse and WorldGuard) to ensure individual and isolated workspaces, while also enabling collaborative work. The central contribution is a multi-agent system with an integrated ‘black box’ verification engine that mitigates redstone asynchrony and latency through controlled signal injection and software clock synchronization, enabling real-time deterministic validation of both basic logic gates and more complex sequential circuits. Additionally, the ecosystem includes a specialized suite of logic scenarios and a web-based dashboard for real-time teacher monitoring. In a pilot study (N=30), the system achieved an average task completion rate of 89.1%, and an adapted Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) analysis indicated that technical stability is positively associated with student performance. Full article
23 pages, 1117 KB  
Article
Entrepreneurial Coaching and Self-Efficacy as Catalysts for Business Growth Among Women Entrepreneurs in Gauteng, South Africa
by Mahalia Lerato Molema, Patrick Ebong Ebewo and Elona Nobukhosi Ndlovu
Adm. Sci. 2026, 16(2), 60; https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci16020060 (registering DOI) - 23 Jan 2026
Viewed by 49
Abstract
Entrepreneurship aims to contribute significantly to economic development, a trend that has been progressively growing over time. Nonetheless, female entrepreneurs continue to face substantial challenges, including limited access to financial resources and sociocultural barriers. The influence of Entrepreneurial Coaching (EC) offers a valuable [...] Read more.
Entrepreneurship aims to contribute significantly to economic development, a trend that has been progressively growing over time. Nonetheless, female entrepreneurs continue to face substantial challenges, including limited access to financial resources and sociocultural barriers. The influence of Entrepreneurial Coaching (EC) offers a valuable perspective for analysing entrepreneurial self-efficacy and business growth. Grounded in Systems Theory, the research examines how EC interventions can bolster the confidence of women entrepreneurs and facilitate adaptive responses to business challenges. Utilising a quantitative, explanatory research design, the study employed convenience and snowball sampling to recruit 257 women entrepreneurs who received coaching. The relationships among EC, the six dimensions of entrepreneurial self-efficacy (ESE), and business growth outcomes were analysed utilising Structural Equation Modelling (SEM). Although seven hypotheses were proposed, only four were supported, whereas three were refuted. The findings show a positive correlation between EC and business growth. The supported hypothesis concerning coping with unexpected challenges, investor relations, and core purpose (value proposition) was accepted. Conversely, hypotheses regarding new product and market development, innovative environments, and the development of critical human resources were not supported. This research extends the existing literature on Entrepreneurial Coaching by demonstrating that the capacity to navigate unforeseen challenges, manage investor relations, and adhere to core purposes is correlated with business growth among women entrepreneurs. Thus, the significance of the study lies in the integration of Entrepreneurial Coaching, Entrepreneurial Self-Efficacy, and Business Growth. Full article
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26 pages, 725 KB  
Article
Unlocking GAI in Universities: Leadership-Driven Corporate Social Responsibility for Digital Sustainability
by Mostafa Aboulnour Salem and Zeyad Aly Khalil
Adm. Sci. 2026, 16(2), 58; https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci16020058 - 23 Jan 2026
Viewed by 60
Abstract
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) has evolved into a strategic governance framework through which organisations address environmental sustainability, stakeholder expectations, and long-term institutional viability. In knowledge-intensive organisations such as universities, Green Artificial Intelligence (GAI) is increasingly recognised as an internal CSR agenda. GAI can [...] Read more.
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) has evolved into a strategic governance framework through which organisations address environmental sustainability, stakeholder expectations, and long-term institutional viability. In knowledge-intensive organisations such as universities, Green Artificial Intelligence (GAI) is increasingly recognised as an internal CSR agenda. GAI can reduce digital and energy-related environmental impacts while enhancing educational and operational performance. This study examines how higher education leaders, as organisational decision-makers, form intentions to adopt GAI within institutional CSR and digital sustainability strategies. It focuses specifically on leadership intentions to implement key GAI practices, including Smart Energy Management Systems, Energy-Efficient Machine Learning models, Virtual and Remote Laboratories, and AI-powered sustainability dashboards. Grounded in the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT), the study investigates how performance expectancy, effort expectancy, social influence, and facilitating conditions shape behavioural intentions to adopt GAI. Survey data were collected from higher education leaders across Saudi universities, representing diverse national and cultural backgrounds within a shared institutional context. The findings indicate that facilitating conditions, performance expectancy, and social influence significantly influence adoption intentions, whereas effort expectancy does not. Gender and cultural context also moderate several adoption pathways. Generally, the results demonstrate that adopting GAI in universities constitutes a governance-level CSR decision rather than a purely technical choice. This study advances CSR and digital sustainability research by positioning GAI as a strategic tool for responsible digital transformation and by offering actionable insights for higher education leaders and policymakers. Full article
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41 pages, 1269 KB  
Article
Digital Skills and Employer Transparency: Two Key Drivers Reinforcing Positive AI Attitudes and Perception Among Europeans
by Dharan Bharti, Cristian Balducci and Salvatore Zappalà
Informatics 2026, 13(1), 17; https://doi.org/10.3390/informatics13010017 - 22 Jan 2026
Viewed by 19
Abstract
Using 2024 Eurobarometer survey data from 26,415 workers in 27 EU countries, this study examines how digital skills and employer transparency shape workers’ attitudes toward and perception of artificial intelligence (AI). Drawing on information systems and behavioral theories, regression analyses reveal that digital [...] Read more.
Using 2024 Eurobarometer survey data from 26,415 workers in 27 EU countries, this study examines how digital skills and employer transparency shape workers’ attitudes toward and perception of artificial intelligence (AI). Drawing on information systems and behavioral theories, regression analyses reveal that digital skills strongly predict augmentation-dominant attitude. Workers with higher digital skills view AI as complementary rather than threatening, with an augmentation attitude mediating 56% of the skills–perception relationship. Adjacently, employer transparency attenuates the translation of replacement attitude into a negative perception of AI in the workplace. Organizations and policymakers should prioritize digital upskilling and ensure workplace AI transparency requirements to foster a positive attitude and perception, recognizing that skills development and organizational communication are equally vital for the successful integration of AI in the workplace. Full article
28 pages, 1066 KB  
Article
Breaking Free from Managerial Myopia: Government and Corporate Governance as Catalysts for Firm Innovation
by Junchang Pan, Hamish Anderson, Junshi Chen and Jing Chi
J. Risk Financial Manag. 2026, 19(1), 94; https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm19010094 (registering DOI) - 22 Jan 2026
Viewed by 21
Abstract
Employing textual analysis of the “short-term vision” vocabulary in annual reports, we investigate the impact of managerial myopia on firm innovation and performance. Our results indicate that managerial myopia hampers innovation, and this result remains robust across a battery of robustness checks. Managerial [...] Read more.
Employing textual analysis of the “short-term vision” vocabulary in annual reports, we investigate the impact of managerial myopia on firm innovation and performance. Our results indicate that managerial myopia hampers innovation, and this result remains robust across a battery of robustness checks. Managerial myopia also weakens the positive impact of innovation on firm growth, and value in the long run. We find that state ownership and good corporate governance mitigate the negative impact of managerial myopia. The evidence supports the upper echelon theory and time orientation theoretical framework. This paper enriches the research on the influencing factors of corporate innovation, by providing evidence that people’s perception of time affects decision making and provides support for government ownership and strong corporate governance practices in alleviating the negative consequences of managerial myopia. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Emerging Trends and Innovations in Corporate Finance and Governance)
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16 pages, 839 KB  
Article
The Relationship Between Parenting Styles and Children’s Prosocial Behavior: The Mediating Role of Children’s Emotional Intelligence
by Siqi Zhang, Ping Wang, Weichen Wang, Heng Su and Xianbing Zhang
Behav. Sci. 2026, 16(1), 155; https://doi.org/10.3390/bs16010155 - 22 Jan 2026
Viewed by 20
Abstract
Prosocial behavior is an important manifestation of socialization in young children. As the primary setting for socialization of young children, the family bears the significant responsibility of fostering prosocial behavior in young children. Drawing on family systems theory and Goleman’s emotional intelligence theory, [...] Read more.
Prosocial behavior is an important manifestation of socialization in young children. As the primary setting for socialization of young children, the family bears the significant responsibility of fostering prosocial behavior in young children. Drawing on family systems theory and Goleman’s emotional intelligence theory, the purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between parenting styles and children’s prosocial behavior and the mediating role of children’s emotional intelligence in it. In this study, an online questionnaire was distributed to 869 young children’s parents using the Parenting Style Questionnaire, Children’s Prosocial Behavior Questionnaire, and Children’s Emotional Intelligence Questionnaire. The results indicated that democratic parenting style positively influenced children’s prosocial behavior, while indulgent parenting style, permissive parenting style and inconsistent parenting style negatively impacted it. Authoritarian parenting style had no significant effect on children’s prosocial behavior. Children’s emotional intelligence mediated the relationship between parenting styles and prosocial behavior. This study explored factors influencing children’s prosocial behavior from both external family systems and internal individual perspectives and revealed their underlying mechanisms, providing theoretical support for research and educational practice on children’s prosocial behavior. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Educational Psychology)
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22 pages, 639 KB  
Article
Psychometric Validation of the Community Antimicrobial Use Scale (CAMUS) in Primary Healthcare and the Implications for Future Use
by Nishana Ramdas, Natalie Schellack, Corrie Uys, Brian Godman, Stephen M. Campbell and Johanna C. Meyer
Antibiotics 2026, 15(1), 107; https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics15010107 - 21 Jan 2026
Viewed by 68
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Patient-level factors strongly influence antimicrobial resistance (AMR) through the pressure applied to healthcare professionals to prescribe antibiotics even for self-limiting viral infections, enhanced by knowledge and attitude concerns. This includes Africa, with high levels of AMR. However, validated measurement tools for African [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Patient-level factors strongly influence antimicrobial resistance (AMR) through the pressure applied to healthcare professionals to prescribe antibiotics even for self-limiting viral infections, enhanced by knowledge and attitude concerns. This includes Africa, with high levels of AMR. However, validated measurement tools for African primary healthcare (PHC) are scarce. This study evaluated the reliability, structural validity, and interpretability of the Community Antimicrobial Use Scale (CAMUS) in South Africa. Methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted with 1283 adults across 25 diverse public PHC facilities across two provinces. The 30-item theory-based tool underwent exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis (EFA/CFA), reliability, and validity testing. Results: EFA identified a coherent five-factor structure: (F1) Understanding antibiotics; (F2) Social and behavioural norms; (F3) Non-prescribed use; (F4) Understanding of AMR; and (F5) Attitudes. Internal consistency was strongest for knowledge and misuse domains (alpha approximation 0.80). Test–retest reliability was good-to-excellent (ICC: 0.72–0.89). CFA confirmed acceptable composite reliability (CR ≥ 0.63). Although average variance extracted (AVE) was low for broader behavioural constructs, indicating conceptual breadth, it was high for AMR knowledge (0.737). Construct validity was supported by positive correlations with health literacy (r = 0.48) and appropriate use intentions (r = 0.42). Measurement error metrics (SEM = 1.59; SDC = 4.40) indicated good precision for group-level comparisons. Conclusions: CAMUS demonstrated a theoretically grounded structure with robust performance in knowledge and misuse domains. While social and attitudinal domains require refinement, we believe the tool is psychometrically suitable for group-level antimicrobial use surveillance and programme evaluation in South African PHC settings and wider to help with targeting future educational programmes among patients. Full article
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34 pages, 3250 KB  
Article
Hotel Guests’ Perceptions of Sustainable Tourism Practices Within the Framework of Cue Utilization Theory: An Analysis of a Worldwide Online Travel Platform’s Sustainability-Certified Hotels
by Aysel Çetinkaya, Zeynep Benan Dondurucu, Sema Çağlayan, Gamze Yetkin Cılızoğlu and Yeliz Kuşay
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 1113; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18021113 - 21 Jan 2026
Viewed by 87
Abstract
In the digital tourism marketplace, online reviews have become a decisive source of information for travelers who cannot directly assess the quality of hospitality services before purchase. However, it remains unclear how service-related and sustainability-related cues interact to shape guest perceptions in sustainable [...] Read more.
In the digital tourism marketplace, online reviews have become a decisive source of information for travelers who cannot directly assess the quality of hospitality services before purchase. However, it remains unclear how service-related and sustainability-related cues interact to shape guest perceptions in sustainable hotel contexts. This study investigates how intrinsic and extrinsic cues are reflected in online user reviews of sustainable hotels. Drawing on Cue Utilization Theory, a longitudinal content analysis was conducted on a worldwide online travel platform’s (OTP) reviews of hotels certified for their sustainability practices (2004–2024) by user selection. A coding framework was developed deductively based on prior studies on hotel service quality and sustainability practices, and data were analyzed using MAXQDA, Leximancer, and VADER sentiment analysis. Findings indicated that reviews primarily emphasize service quality attributes—particularly staff efficiency, food quality, and accommodation facilities—while sustainability themes appear less frequently, often in nature-related contexts. Sentiment analysis revealed a predominantly positive emotional tone shaped by service quality experiences. Overall, intrinsic cues play a central role in forming guest perceptions, highlighting the need for emotionally engaging sustainability communication strategies. Full article
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