This study, conducted over a four-year period at Chester Zoo in the UK, sought to evaluate the impact on visitor behavior and interpretation use that a transition from second- to third-generation zoo exhibit might affect. Visitors spent more time in the newer exhibit (even when allowing for relative floor area) and visitor time budgets suggest a high degree of visitor interaction with different exhibit elements. Specific interpretive elements were analyzed in detail, using quasi-quantitative methods in addition to more standard timing and tracking measures. From this, a proportional relationship between time and visitor engagement is proposed. Areas that were highlighted as under-performing during evaluation were retrofitted with simple, but highly visible, instructional signage and this was found to increase the proportion of visitors that stopped, and how long they stopped in a significant way.
CITATION STYLE
Moss, A., Esson, M., & Francis, D. (2010). Evaluation of a Third-Generation Zoo Exhibit in Relation to Visitor Behavior and Interpretation Use. Journal of Interpretation Research, 15(2), 11–28. https://doi.org/10.1177/109258721001500203
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