碩士 / 靜宜大學 / 觀光事業學系研究所 / 94 / The study aims to discuss the relationships between sensation seeking and well-being of SCUBA divers. A total of 220 valid samples were collected through questionnaire surveys. The study results are described as follows:
1.Scuba divers’ background variables were significantly related to sensation seeking. Gender, age, and education level were significantly related to sensation seeking.
2.Scuba divers’ background variables were significantly related to well-being. Age, occupation, and invested to diving level were significantly related to well-being. Besides, the types of sport diving license owned by SCUBA divers was significantly related to their personal expressiveness.
3.There was no relationship between SCUBA divers’ sensation seeking and well-being.
The study discovers that SCUBA divers were more likely to have higher happy experience scores than sensation seeking in SCUBA diving activity. Therefore, the study suggests that management agencies should rather position on the activity groups that would like to enjoy SCUBA diving experience with family and relatives than take the characteristics and nature of adventure activity itself into consideration while promoting SCUBA diving activities in the nation.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:TW/094PU005571025 |
Date | January 1900 |
Creators | Hsien-Chen Wang, 王憲珍 |
Contributors | none, 葉源鎰 |
Source Sets | National Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations in Taiwan |
Language | zh-TW |
Detected Language | English |
Type | 學位論文 ; thesis |
Format | 122 |
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