• YouTube

Font size

  • S
  • M
  • L
  • EN
  • JP
Wakayama University Center for Tourism Research
  • YouTube
  • Access
  • Contact
  • Site map
  • Wakayama Univ. TOP
  • About
  • News and Events
  • Research and Expertise
  • Researchers
  • Resources
  • Links

News and Events

  1. CTR
  2. News and Events
  3. attribute
  4. Publications
ツイート

Relationships of involvement and interdependent happiness across a revised Masters Games participant typology

公開日 2020.11.24

A research paper written by CTR Acting Director, Dr. Eiji Ito was published in Journal of Sport & Tourism.

?

?

?

Title

Relationships of involvement and interdependent happiness across a revised Masters Games participant typology

?

Author

Eiji Ito, Faculty of Tourism, Wakayama University, Wakayama, Japan

?

Source

Journal of Sport & Tourism, 2020

DOI: 10.1080/14775085.2020.1824799

https://doi.org/10.1080/14775085.2020.1824799

*Indexed in Scopus

Journal details: https://www.scopus.com/sourceid/19900191762

?

Abstract

This study aimed to examine the relationships between involvement and happiness across a typology of Masters Games participants. The typology of Trauer, Ryan, and Lockyer [(2003). The South Pacific Masters’ Games – competitor involvement and games development: Implications for management and tourism. Journal of Sport & Tourism, 8(4), 240–259. doi:10.1080/ 1477508032000161564] was revised and the following four groups of Masters Games participants were created: Games Competitor (high fun-orientation, high competition-orientation), Games Enthusiast (high fun-orientation, low competition-orientation), Serious Competitor (low fun-orientation, high competition- orientation), and Novice (low fun-orientation, low competition- orientation). An online survey was conducted by 449 Japanese people who had participated in Masters Games within the last three years. An importance-performance analysis was employed to categorise the participants into the four groups. Multiple regression analyses were subsequently performed for each of the four groups. The analyses identified that with interdependent happiness, (a) attraction was positively correlated for Games Competitor, Serious Competitor, and Novice, (b) centrality was positively correlated for Games Competitor and Games Enthusiast, and (c) social bonding was positively correlated for Games Competitor, Games Enthusiast, and Novice. These results suggest that this revised typology for Masters Games participants is an effective framework for understanding involvement and interdependent happiness and can be used in the development of promotional/marketing strategies. In particular, under the extraordinary circumstances of the COVID-19 pandemic, in which people show less concern for leisure activities including masters sports, such evidence-based promotional/marketing strategies will be needed for re-energising the Masters Games culture and for enhancing participants’ health and well-being following the COVID-19 pandemic.

?

Key words

COVID-19; interdependent happiness; Japan; Masters Games participant typology; sport tourism

?

威尼斯赌场

国際観光学研究センター
Back

News and Events

  • News
  • Events
  • Publications

Event Calendar

2025年4月

日 月 火 水 木 金 土
30 31 1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 1 2 3
前の月 | 今月 | 次の月

Go to Pagetop

  • About
  • News
  • Research
  • Researchers
  • Resource
  • Access
  • Contact
  • Site map
  • Privacy policy
Wakayama University Center for Tourism Research
Sakaedani 930, Wakayama-city 640-8510, JAPAN
Tel: +81-(0)73-457-7025

Copyright (c)2010-2015 Wakayama University