Tourist GPS Tracking
Tourist GPS tracking is a spatio-temporal research pipeline that records where and when visitors move within a destination by equipping consenting tourists with GPS loggers or smartphone trackers and then reconstructing their trajectories. Introduced into mainstream tourism research by Noam Shoval and Michal Isaacson, whose 2007 Annals of Tourism Research paper laid out both the data-collection methodology and the analytic toolkit, the approach replaced unreliable recall-based diaries with continuous, objective position fixes. Their 2010 book consolidated the field, and McKercher and Lau showed how the recovered trajectories reveal a rich typology of movement patterns within a destination. The method couples careful field deployment with trajectory cleaning, stop-and-move segmentation, and spatial aggregation to map the geography and rhythm of visitor activity.
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Sources
- Shoval, N., & Isaacson, M. (2007). Tracking tourists in the digital age. Annals of Tourism Research, 34(1), 141-159. DOI: 10.1016/j.annals.2006.07.007 ↗
- Shoval, N., & Isaacson, M. (2010). Tourist Mobility and Advanced Tracking Technologies. Routledge. ISBN: 9780415963527
- McKercher, B., & Lau, G. (2008). Movement Patterns of Tourists within a Destination. Tourism Geographies, 10(3), 355-374. DOI: 10.1080/14616680802236352 ↗
How to cite this page
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Tourist GPS Tracking (Spatio-Temporal Tracking of Visitor Movement at Destinations). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/tourism/tourist-gps-tracking
Which method?
Set this method beside its closest kin and read them side by side — the library lays the books on the table; the choice is yours.
- Destination Network AnalysisTourism↔ compare
- Space-Time Path AnalysisTourism↔ compare
- Tourism Carrying Capacity AssessmentTourism Studies↔ compare