While the literature has shown that engaging in serious leisure is associated with well-being of older adults, the relationship between depression and serious leisure has not been examined.
Research gap analysis derived from 3 psychology papers in our local library.
The gap
While the literature has shown that engaging in serious leisure is associated with well-being of older adults, the relationship between depression and serious leisure has not been examined.
Consensus across the literature
Clustered from 3 gap mentions across 3 papers via embedding cosine ≥ 0.62.
Research trend
Established — well-defined area with open sub-problems.
Supporting evidence — 3 representative gaps
- Self-Efficacy as a Mechanism Linking Daily Stress to Mental Health in Students: A Three-Wave Cross-Lagged Study (2018) · doi
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: While stress is generally well established to be predictive for different indicators of mental health, little is known about the longitudinal effects of daily life stressors and the role of self-evaluation factors.
Keywords: background objectives stress generally well established predictive different indicators mental health little known longitudinal effects - The Relationships between Leisure Time, Perceived Stress and Subjective Well-Being in Young and Middle-Aged Working Adults in China (2022) · doi
Previous studies have documented the correlations between leisure time, perceived stress, and subjective well-being (SWB), yet the extent to which the amount of leisure time impacts the effect of perceived stress on SWB has rarely been studied.
Keywords: leisure time perceived stress previous documented correlations subjective well extent amount impacts effect rarely studied - Serious leisure and depression in older adults: a study of pickleball players (2018) · doi
While the literature has shown that engaging in serious leisure is associated with well-being of older adults, the relationship between depression and serious leisure has not been examined.
Keywords: serious leisure literature engaging associated well older adults relationship depression examined
Explore this gap further
Search “While the literature has shown that engaging in serious leisure is associated with well-being of older adults, the relationship between depression and serious leisure has not been examined.” across open scholarly engines for the latest related literature.
Working on this gap? Publish with us.
Science AI Journal reviews manuscripts in under 15 minutes with 8 specialised AI reviewers calibrated on 23,000+ real peer reviews. Open access, CC BY 4.0.
Free tools for your next paper
Related gaps in Psychology
- Numerous studies document lower levels of depression among adults with higher education, but little is known about the way in which the association varies over the life course.Numerous studies document lower levels of depression among adults with higher education, but little is known about the way in which the asso…
- Peer victimization is a frequent occurrence for many adolescents; however, some of the psychometric properties of self-report scales assessing these experiences remain unclear.Peer victimization is a frequent occurrence for many adolescents; however, some of the psychometric properties of self-report scales assessi…
- However, the data are often contradictory with respect to the prevalence of the phenomenon: depression may range from about 10-30% in the general population (Alonso and Lepine, 2007).However, the data are often contradictory with respect to the prevalence of the phenomenon: depression may range from about 10-30% in the ge…
- Our findings do not support an introduction of large-scale mindfulness interventions in schools although the potential influence of mode of delivery needs to be further examined.Our findings do not support an introduction of large-scale mindfulness interventions in schools although the potential influence of mode of …