Abstract
This research studies the relationship between cognitive psychology best suited in studying human behavior and traveling as part of one of our social activities when choosing destination sets: rejection, preferences, behavior in the planning of a pleasure vacation, travel distance to take into consideration, and the possibility of hiring a travel agent to minimize local distances rather than total distance depends on our level of education and personality, how engaging traveling is to our cognitive behavior, and how it affects our states of consciousness will be important to our decisions we take vacations and travel, therefore, making this observational learning a lifetime experience.
As we can see, we touch with our skin, we see with our eyes, and hear with our ears. All senses, one way or another perceive stimuli in them separately within the brain.
These perceptions we acquire through our senses, from our traveling, are experiences linked emotionally, and those emotions affect our state of consciousness during traveling, especially once we get to our destination.
Among those traits we have: * Rejection * Preferences * Behavior in the planning of our pleasure vacation * Travel distance to take into consideration * Hiring a travel agent
I remember how much excitement we went through those nights on July 4, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008, and regardless of those biological changes in our circadian rhythm that affected our states of consciousness over time ended up with making us “night people”.
Those fluctuations in our active two-week vacation really did affect the way we slept, dreamed, and woke up.
Despite all these traits in traveling, we kept on making those reservations with our travel agents as our destinations were all booked up and had to split the nights in different cities along our route, e.g., Ocean City, Maryland before we reached our last city, Virginia Beach. It was a
References: Ankomah, P. K., Crompton, J.L., & Baker, D. (1996). Influence of cognitive distance in vacation Choice. Annals of Tourism Research, 23(1), p.138-150 Gärling, T. (1989). The role of cognitive maps in spatial decisions. Journal of Environmental psychology, 9(4), p.269-278.