Sport Participation Time-Budget Diary
The sport participation time-budget diary measures how much sport and leisure people actually do by asking them to record their day as a sequence of time-stamped episodes rather than answering a single recall question. Building on the time-use diary tradition formalized by Jonathan Gershuny and Oriel Sullivan, the method treats a day as an exhaustive, non-overlapping chain of activities, each with a start and end time, a location, and a record of who else was present. Applied to sport and leisure, it captures not only the duration and frequency of exercise, training, and active or passive recreation, but also the social and spatial context in which they occur. Because every minute is accounted for, the diary yields population estimates of participation that are far less prone to the over-reporting and rounding that plague stylized 'how often do you exercise?' survey items.
Изворни запис
Цитирани радови су копирани дословно из изворног записа методе. Из њих се не изводи верификација на нивоу тврдње.
- Gershuny, J., & Sullivan, O. (1998). The Sociological Uses of Time-use Diary Analysis. European Sociological Review, 14(1), 69-85. · DOI 10.1093/oxfordjournals.esr.a018228
- Cornwell, B., Gershuny, J., & Sullivan, O. (2019). The Social Structure of Time: Emerging Trends and New Directions. Annual Review of Sociology, 45, 301-320. · DOI 10.1146/annurev-soc-073018-022416
Куроване тврдње
Тврдње су сачуване у регистру доказа, свака са својом проценом.
Овај приказ не измишља процену тврдње када регистар нема ниједну.
Сродне методе
Генерисано из графа метода и приказано као машински предложене везе — не изводи се тврдња доказа.