All Stories

  1. Values, Ideologies, Attitudes, and Preferences for Relative Allocations to Park and Recreation Services
  2. Health disparities and health promotion needs of college students with intellectual and/or developmental disabilities: A systematic literature review
  3. Assessing the relationship between community engagement and perceived ownership of an urban park in Philadelphia
  4. “To Be Quite Honest, If It Wasn't for Videogames I Wouldn't Have a Social Life at All”: Motivations of Young Adults With Autism Spectrum Disorder for Playing Videogames as Leisure
  5. Repositioning Undergraduate Education in Recreation and Leisure Studies
  6. Changes in tourists’ perception of well-being based on their use of emotion regulation strategies during vacation
  7. Investigation of the technology effects of online travel media on virtual travel experience and behavioral intention
  8. “A unifying force in the community”: Perceptions of a neighborhood park renovation
  9. Understanding the Sources of Online Travel Information
  10. Physical Activity Mode and Mental Distress in Adulthood
  11. Social Referencing Gaze Behavior During a Videogame Task: Eye Tracking Evidence from Children With and Without ASD
  12. Service Delivery Experiences and Intervention Needs of Military Families with Children with ASD
  13. Parental support of video game play by children with ASD
  14. Theory of Planned Behavior Questionnaire
  15. The Role of Functional and Wellness Values in Visitors' Evaluation of Spa Experiences
  16. Opportunities for Promoting Youth Physical Activity: An Examination of Youth Summer Camps
  17. Leisure as a cross-cultural concept
  18. Spring Break Travel: Thirty Years of Scholarly Evidence, 1980–2010
  19. Challenges to Field-based Outdoor Research: Pitfalls and Possibilities
  20. Behavioral and psychological involvement of online video gamers : Building blocks or building walls to socialization?
  21. Measuring Physical Activity in Youth Settings: Considerations for Instrument Selection
  22. Challenges to Field-Based Outdoor Research: Pitfalls and Possibilities