2000
DOI: 10.1080/01490409950202302
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Leisure Attitude, Leisure Satisfaction, and Perceived Freedom in Leisure within Family Dyads

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Cited by 58 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Siegenthaler and O'Dell (2000) stated that marital satisfaction of college couples is enhanced by similar leisure attitudes, therefore, these two factors have a relationship with each other. Service attitude plays an important role in customer satisfaction.…”
Section: Hospital Accreditation (Ha)mentioning
confidence: 96%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Siegenthaler and O'Dell (2000) stated that marital satisfaction of college couples is enhanced by similar leisure attitudes, therefore, these two factors have a relationship with each other. Service attitude plays an important role in customer satisfaction.…”
Section: Hospital Accreditation (Ha)mentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Likewise, as the number of travelers to a particular region raises, residents who at first were strongly positive in their attitudes to their travelers develop raising reservations concerning the long-term benefits of the travelers (Akis, Peristianis, & Warner, 1996). Siegenthaler and O'Dell (2000) recommended that children whose parents give them permission to be involved in activities and make choices about their activities may illustrate more positive attitudes toward leisure as they mature. Finally, reported that attitudes could differ depending on the travelers' perceptions of what constitutes MT.…”
Section: Hospital Accreditation (Ha)mentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Leisure satisfaction can be considered as the perceived level of conscious or unconscious completion of the free time requirement (Demir et al, 2013). Leisure satisfaction, which also significantly affects the perception of life satisfaction of individuals or of university students (Wang et al, 2008), can play an active role in increasing the quality of life and imposing positive emotions towards it (Siegenthaler & O'Dell, 2000). This shows that leisure activities can create different satisfactions (Demir & Demir, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A similar result was obtained by Lu and Hu (2005) on Chinese university students. Siegenthaller and O'Dell (2000), and Di Bona (2000) also found no significant difference between genders on the levels of satisfaction with leisure time. Griffin and McKenna (1998) and Boley (2001) found similar results in their studies on elderly individuals.…”
Section: Results Conclusion and Recommendationsmentioning
confidence: 99%