FEC3-Livros (ou partes, com ou sem arbitragem científica)
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Livro científico ou capítulo de livro científico ou obra que resulte de investigação
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Percorrer FEC3-Livros (ou partes, com ou sem arbitragem científica) por Objetivos de Desenvolvimento Sustentável (ODS) "08:Trabalho Digno e Crescimento Económico"
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- Exploring consumer experiences in Wine Tourism through sentiment analysis: An assessment of Tripadvisor reviews about Wineries in France, Portugal, and ItalyPublication . Siegl, Laura; Baptista, Ema; Ruvo, Daniele; Ramos, CeliaThis study examines TripAdvisor reviews from three wineries in Europe to analyze customer perceptions and preferences in wine tourism. The investigation aims to understand the impact of online reviews on winery reputations and customer satisfaction in the context of wine tourism experiences. The study utilizes an advanced data analytics tool, namely Power BI, to analyze the development and demographics of the reviews and Orange Data Mining to conduct sentiment analysis and text mining. By examining reviews from wineries in France, Portugal, and Italy, this work identifies key themes, sentiments, and preferences expressed by customers, providing actionable insights for wineries to enhance visitor experiences and strategic decision-making in the wine tourism industry using an artificial intelligence approach.
- Resilience, crisis and innovation dynamics: emerging challengesPublication . Baycan, Tüzin; Pinto, HugoThe concept of resilience has gained particular relevance to the understanding of socio-economic systems since its expansion in ecology studies. It has been widely used in a variety of areas centered around flexible adaptation, usually in a socio-economic or ecological environment where risk, uncertainty, unpredictability and turbulence are recurrent. The history of resilience as a concept is closely related to the emergence of system’s approach and new ecological ideas in the late 1960s (Davoudi et al., 2012). At that time, a new awareness of environmental degradation was translated into social movements and turmoil that questioned industrial paradigms and Western egemony. The neoclassical economic principle that growth can exist without regard for resource limitations began to inspire concerns among both intellectuals and the general public. The most often cited resilience-framework, Holling’s resilience theory (Holling, 2010), was an explicit critique of the departure of 1970s industrial management practices from the idea that a system stabilizes around a single equilibrium.
- Resilient territories: innovation and creativity for new models of regional developmentPublication . Pinto, HugoToday, Europe is in a delicate situation. Contrasts of growing competition and the lack of capacity to overcome challenges from the recent economic turbulence in specific regions and countries have created a sense of urgency to reflect on member-states cohesion. Questions arise regarding the diverse regional economies that compose the European Union (EU) and what this diversity means for adaptation to external shocks, resistance to negative impacts and evolution to new sociotechnical regimes. Essentially, academics, planners and decision makers are looking for a way to increase the resilience of the EU territory. Resilience can be understood as a non-equilibrium characteristic that facilitates a socioeconomic system to recover from a negative impact by reshaping a former trajectory or by adapting a new trajectory that successfully deals with the external pressures. These processes and characteristics have been studied in the recent past by regional scientists seeking to identify the set of dynamic conditions that create a more or less resilient territory. In the regional context, resilience is a concept adapted from the study of ecological systems and other fields of science that is applied to the understanding of geographically embedded socioeconomic systems. It is often a characteristic connected to a threshold of socioeconomic variety and specialisation that facilitates a smooth adaptation to the challenges faced in territories. With the recent crisis, some regions have dealt with this concept, by planning the adequate conditions for resilience. Regional resilience has also been connected, but not fully integrated in the literature, with more stabilised concepts, such as innovation and creativity (Pinto & Pereira, 2014). Innovation is often assumed as crucial for resilience. It was a central notion for the EU s policies in the last decade and it was also very influential in science and technology (S&T) studies. In particular, innovation systems have been used as a framework to develop and implement policies in transnational, national, regional, local, and even sectoral contexts (OECD, 2005). An innovation system focuses on a specific area or sector, where a group of actors is interconnected, with the goal to innovate. The core of the system has the main function of innovation but also has a broader ambition for growth and development. Hence, when analysing the innovation system it is important to understand actors and linkages that are directly connected to S&T infrastructure but also the institutional architecture and a vast group of building blocks that are in the centre of the socio-economic profile of the territory, providing the range of possibilities for adaptation and evolution.
