Effects of Online Video Sport Spectatorship on the Subjective Well-Being of College Students: The Moderating Effect of Sport Involvement

Author:

Lin Yi-Hsiu1,Chen Chen-Yueh2,Lin Yen-Kuang3,Lee Chen-Yin4,Cheng Chia-Yi5

Affiliation:

1. Master Program of Sport Facility Management and Health Promotion, National Taiwan University, Taipei 10617, Taiwan

2. Doctoral Program of Transnational Sport Management and Innovation, National Taiwan Sports University, Taoyuan 33301, Taiwan

3. Graduate Institute of Athletics and Coaching Science, National Taiwan Sport University, Taoyuan 33301, Taiwan

4. Graduate Institute of Educational Art and Healing, Mingdao University, Changhua 52345, Taiwan

5. Department of Recreation and Leisure Industry Managemnt, National Taiwan Sport University, Taoyuan 33301, Taiwan

Abstract

Individuals’ engagement in sports and sport-related entertainment is reported to improve their subjective well-being (SWB). We investigated whether online video sport spectatorship (OVSS) enhances the SWB of college students and whether sport involvement moderates the correlation between OVSS and SWB. For this, a pretest–posttest experimental design with a 3-week-long intervention (OVSS) was adopted. Two groups, intervention and control, were formed. The findings revealed that OVSS improved SWB (p = 0.017). Furthermore, sport involvement moderated the correlation between OVSS and SWB (p = 0.024). Specifically, participants with high levels of sport involvement in the intervention group exhibited better SWB (M = 5.51) than did the corresponding controls (M = 4.69). By contrast, among participants with low levels of sport involvement, only the intervention group showed improved SWB; however, it remained unchanged in the control group. The present study enriches the relevant literature and provides empirical evidence for the psychological benefits conferred by OVSS. Our findings may serve as a reference for designing interventions aimed at improving individuals’ overall quality of life.

Funder

National Taiwan Sport University

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference44 articles.

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