Gyan Prakash

57698843400

Publications - 2

Metaverse a commercial bliss for recreational tourism? A multistage mixed-method investigation

Publication Name: Tourism Recreation Research

Publication Date: 2026-01-01

Volume: Unknown

Issue: Unknown

Page Range: Unknown

Description:

With the rapidly evolving digital landscape, the metaverse presents itself as a promising tool for achieving commercial pursuits in the tourism industry. We apply the presence theory to examine how the industry can leverage the remarkable features of the metaverse to create memorable experiences for tourists at brand destinations–a unique identification or memorable experience associated with a destination, preferably induced by highly immersive services facilitated through the metaverse. The need to discern the impact of metaverse technologies on tourists’ psychological well-being led us to adopt a design science methodology, which enabled us to yield significant findings through a mixed-methods analysis comprising four studies. Firstly, we employ the grounded method approach, utilising think-aloud protocol interviews to elicit various themes. Secondly, we conducted a bibliographic study in RStudio software to extract key insights from 119 Scopus journals. Thirdly, using a structural topic modelling approach, we explored various topics. Finally, we employed the interpretive structural modelling (ISM) approach to establish a cause-and-effect relationship between variables of crucial interest. The significant finding of our study is that the metaverse can be effectively utilised as a highly assistive tool for curating niche experiences for tourists.

Open Access: Yes

DOI: 10.1080/02508281.2025.2611775

Beyond attention spans: Cognitive lock-in and awe experiences in short-video advertising among informavores

Publication Name: Acta Psychologica

Publication Date: 2026-08-01

Volume: 268

Issue: Unknown

Page Range: Unknown

Description:

Short videos are reshaping the digital landscape and opening a new frontier in digital marketing. By fostering binge-watching tendencies, cognitive lock-in, and stronger influence over consumer attention and choice, short videos create conditions for sustained engagement. Drawing on Media Systems Dependency Theory (MSDT), this study introduces a new zone phase construct and advances an integrative conceptual model that explains how the psychological mechanisms operating among short video users generate immersive experiences. Using a mixed-methods design that combined inductive exploration with deductive testing, we developed and empirically validated the model through statistical analysis. The study clarifies the drivers of habitual short video use and offers creative, actionable insights for practice. Overall, the findings yield clear implications for digital marketing strategy and make a compelling case for the strategic deployment of short videos to enhance commercial viability.

Open Access: Yes

DOI: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2026.107050