Protected area management and marketing require real-time information on visitors’ behavior and preferences. Thus far, visitor information has been collected mostly with repeated visitor surveys. A wealth of content-rich geographic data is produced by users of different social media platforms. These data could potentially provide continuous information about people’s activities and interactions with the environment at different spatial and temporal scales. In this paper, we compare social media data with traditional survey data in order to map people’s activities and preferences using the most popular national park in Finland, Pallas-Yllästunturi National Park, as a case study. We compare systematically collected survey data and the content...
Recreation and tourism are important ways that people interact with and derive benefits from natural...
Green areas such as natural and periurban parks embed key assets for biodiversity and landscape pres...
Big data offer a great opportunity for nature-based recreation (NbR) mapping and evaluation. However...
Protected area management and marketing require real-time information on visitors’ behavior and pref...
Social media data is increasingly used as a proxy for human activity in diferent environments, inclu...
Social media contains a wealth of information about human activities in different places. This infor...
Social media contains a wealth of information about human activities in different places. This inform...
Social media data are increasingly utilised as a low-cost alternative to visitor surveys in characte...
Green areas such as natural parks provide citizens with a number of health and leisure benefits, oft...
The lack of comprehensive and reliable data regarding visitation and tourist behaviour at local leve...
Spatio-temporal information attached to social media posts allows analysts to study human activity a...
Scientific interest in the potential of urban green spaces, particularly urban parks, to improve hea...
Social forest functions including recreation are important for increasingly urbanised societies. For...
Despite the increasing wealth of user-generated content posted online, the use of data mined from so...
Urban parks and green spaces are among the few places where city dwellers can have regular contact w...
Recreation and tourism are important ways that people interact with and derive benefits from natural...
Green areas such as natural and periurban parks embed key assets for biodiversity and landscape pres...
Big data offer a great opportunity for nature-based recreation (NbR) mapping and evaluation. However...
Protected area management and marketing require real-time information on visitors’ behavior and pref...
Social media data is increasingly used as a proxy for human activity in diferent environments, inclu...
Social media contains a wealth of information about human activities in different places. This infor...
Social media contains a wealth of information about human activities in different places. This inform...
Social media data are increasingly utilised as a low-cost alternative to visitor surveys in characte...
Green areas such as natural parks provide citizens with a number of health and leisure benefits, oft...
The lack of comprehensive and reliable data regarding visitation and tourist behaviour at local leve...
Spatio-temporal information attached to social media posts allows analysts to study human activity a...
Scientific interest in the potential of urban green spaces, particularly urban parks, to improve hea...
Social forest functions including recreation are important for increasingly urbanised societies. For...
Despite the increasing wealth of user-generated content posted online, the use of data mined from so...
Urban parks and green spaces are among the few places where city dwellers can have regular contact w...
Recreation and tourism are important ways that people interact with and derive benefits from natural...
Green areas such as natural and periurban parks embed key assets for biodiversity and landscape pres...
Big data offer a great opportunity for nature-based recreation (NbR) mapping and evaluation. However...