DOI: 10.18297/etd/2086
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Exploring motivations, constraints, and perceptions toward sport consumers' smartphone usage.

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Cited by 2 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 128 publications
(447 reference statements)
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“…Differences on Credibility, Viewing Satisfaction, Flow, and Reviewing Intention between Public TV Stations and One -person Media via SNS tendency of sports media viewers (Seo & Green, 2008). Moreover, as the use of smartphones and other smart devices intensifies, viewers are no longer limited to watching sports through their TV at home; they can now watch live streaming of sports from different parts of the world in the palm of their hands, anytime and anywhere (Kang, 2015). This type of consumption was unimaginable for viewers in the past but has only become possible through the Internet and smart devices.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Differences on Credibility, Viewing Satisfaction, Flow, and Reviewing Intention between Public TV Stations and One -person Media via SNS tendency of sports media viewers (Seo & Green, 2008). Moreover, as the use of smartphones and other smart devices intensifies, viewers are no longer limited to watching sports through their TV at home; they can now watch live streaming of sports from different parts of the world in the palm of their hands, anytime and anywhere (Kang, 2015). This type of consumption was unimaginable for viewers in the past but has only become possible through the Internet and smart devices.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Workers are rated based on their performances on past jobs. In addition, researchers can utilize targeted terms and filters and remove duplicate responses by allowing just one response for each IP address (Kang, 2015). MTurk will be further examined in the sample section that follows.…”
Section: Accessing the Samplementioning
confidence: 99%
“…They collected 482 usable surveys in less than three days (Ha, Kim, Kang, & Park, 2014). Kang (2015) offered a 30-cent MTurk worker payment and received 372 responses. Amazon required an additional 40 percent commission per worker per job that was not required at that time (Bensinger, 2015).…”
Section: Sampling Proceduresmentioning
confidence: 99%