Shea M. Balish
Dalhousie University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Shea M. Balish.
Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport | 2017
Mark W. Bruner; Shea M. Balish; Christopher K Forrest; Sarah Brown; Kristine Webber; Emily Gray; Matthew E McGuckin; Melanie R. Keats; Laurene Rehman; Christopher A. Shields
ABSTRACT An emerging area of research has focused on understanding how the group dynamics of a sport team influence positive youth development (PYD). The identities that youth form through their membership in sport teams (i.e., social identities) have been found to influence teammate behavior and team performance. Yet, minimal work exists on social identity and PYD in youth sport. Purpose: The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between social identity and PYD in sport. Method: Youth engaged in recreational sport (N = 219; Mage = 11.61 years, SD = 1.39 years) completed measures of social identity and PYD in sport. The social identity measure assessed 3 dimensions including ingroup ties (IGT; perceptions of similarity, bonding, belongingness), cognitive centrality (importance of being a team member), and ingroup affect (IGA; feelings associated with group membership). A regression analysis was performed separately for 4 PYD outcomes (personal and social skills, goal setting, initiative, negative experiences) with the 3 dimensions of social identity entered as predictors. Results: Regression analyses revealed that IGT and IGA were positively associated with personal and social skills (R2 Adj. = .29). Further, IGT predicted initiative (R2 Adj. = .16), whereas IGA was positively associated with goal setting (R2 Adj. = .17) and negatively associated with negative experiences (R2 Adj. = .08). Conclusion: The findings extend previous research highlighting the benefits of social identity on teammate behavior and team performance and demonstrate how social identity may contribute to PYD through sport.
Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports | 2015
Shea M. Balish; Daniel R Rainham; Chris M. Blanchard
The objective of this study was to examine, across 22 countries, the association between community size and individual sport, team sport, and exercise participation. Hierarchal non‐linear Bernoulli modeling is used to examine the association between community size (100 000–10 000; <10 000) and (a) individual sport, (b) team sport, and (c) exercise participation. After controlling for country‐level clustering and demographic variables, those residing a community with between 100 000 and 10 000 residents are more likely to participate in individual sport [odds ratio (OR) = 1.14; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.05–1.23] while residing in a community with less than 10 000 residents is unrelated (OR = 1.06; 95% CI = 0.96–1.19). Those residing in communities with between 100 000 and 10 000 residents were more likely to participate in team sport (OR = 1.21; 95% CI = 1.01–1.45) while residing in a community with less than 10 000 residents is unrelated (OR = 1.02; 95% CI = 0.88–1.18). Residing in a community with between 100 000 and 10 000 residents is unrelated to exercise participation (OR = 0.97; 95% CI = 0.89–1.7), while residing in a community with less than 10 000 residents is negatively related to exercise participation (OR = 0.86; 95% CI = 0.79–0.93). These findings provide novel evidence that communities between 100 000 and 10 000 residents are related to increased sport participation, particularly team sport participation.
Journal of epidemiology and global health | 2017
Shea M. Balish
Although evidence suggests sport and recreation are powerful contributors to worldwide public health, sizable gender differences persist. It is unknown whether country characteristics moderate gender differences across countries. The primary purpose of this study was to examine if countries’ levels of democracy and/or gender inequality moderate gender differences in sport and recreation membership across countries. The secondary purpose was to examine if democracy and/or gender inequality predicts overall rates of sport and recreation membership for both males and females. This study involved a nested cross-sectional design and employed the sixth wave (2013) of the world value survey (nSs = 71,901, ncountries = 52). Multiple hierarchal nonlinear Bernoulli models tested: (1) if countries’ levels of democracy moderate gender differences in sport and recreation membership; and (2) if democracy is associated with increased sport and recreation membership for both males and females. Countries’ level of democracy fully moderated gender differences in sport and recreation membership across countries. Moreover, democracy was positively associated with both male and female membership, even when controlling for individual and country-level covariates. Democratic political regimes may confer health benefits via increased levels of sport and recreation membership, especially for females. Future research should test mediating mechanisms.
Journal of Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation and Prevention | 2017
Shea M. Balish; Gail Dechman; Paul Hernandez; John C. Spence; Ryan E. Rhodes; Kerry R. McGannon; Chris M. Blanchard
Purpose: Although daily variation in weather impacts physical activity (PA) levels among relatively healthy individuals, it is largely unknown whether this relationship occurs for those living with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The purpose of this study was to examine how daily variation in temperature, rain, and snow is related to objectively measured PA among patients with COPD, and whether demographic or clinical characteristics moderate these relationships. Methods: Patients with COPD completed a questionnaire and wore a pedometer for 7 days at baseline, end of pulmonary rehabilitation (PR), and 3 and 9 months after completing PR (28 days in total). Results: Hierarchal linear modeling showed that daily mean temperature and total daily rainfall, but not snowfall, independently predicted steps/day, controlling for demographic and clinical covariates in 189 patients in PR. Specifically, an increase of 10°C translates into 316 more steps (6.6% of mean steps/day) whereas a rainfall of 10 mm translates to 175 less steps (3.6% of mean steps/day). Furthermore, those with higher income had more steps/day on warmer days. Conclusions: These results add to converging evidence that weather plays an important role in determining PA among individuals with COPD.
International journal of sport and exercise psychology | 2016
Shea M. Balish; Daniel Rainham; Chris M. Blanchard
Although emerging research suggests members of smaller communities are more likely to play sport, including professional sport, there is little understanding of what sociocultural factors may be associated with sporting contexts in smaller communities. The purpose of this study was to assess if members of smaller communities are also more likely to volunteer in sport. Data were acquired from wave four of the World Value Survey. The analysis involved 22,461 participants from 19 countries. Hierarchal non-linear Bernoulli modelling was used to examine the association between community size and active volunteering with a sport organisation. After controlling for country-level clustering and demographic variables – including sport participation – participants from communities with between 2001 and 20,000 residents were more likely to report volunteering in sport, relative to participants from larger communities (> 500,000). In particular, participants from communities with between 2001 and 5000 residents were the most overrepresented, being 2.17 (95% OR: 1.94–2.43) times more likely to report volunteering than large communities (> 500,000). Moreover, the effect of community size occurred for all other measured forms of volunteering, thus contradicting the idea that limited volunteering opportunities in smaller communities is driving this effect. These findings provide novel evidence that participants from smaller communities are more likely to volunteer, even when controlling for sport participation. Future research should aim to reveal the specific determinants and consequences of sport volunteering in smaller communities.
Cross-Cultural Research | 2016
Shea M. Balish; Robert O. Deaner; Daniel Rainham; Chris M. Blanchard
The spectator lek hypothesis argues that sex differences in preferences for sport largely stem from evolved predispositions and thus should be universal or near universal, whereas socioconstructivist hypotheses argue that such sex differences are entirely socially constructed and thus should vary as a function of a society’s gender inequality. To test these competing hypotheses, cross-national nested data were acquired from the International Social Survey Program (ss = 49,729, ncountries = 34). Hierarchical linear modeling was used to examine whether sex differences in sport are universal or near universal when controlling for countries’ gender inequality. Findings indicate that even when controlling for gender inequality, sex differences remain in reporting sport as one’s most common activity, in watching sport, and in attending sport events and for agreeing with the statement that one plays sport to compete against others. Although this study was limited by the homogeneity of the sampled countries and the use of self-report measures, these findings nonetheless support the spectator lek hypothesis. Future research should examine case studies (e.g., matrilineal societies) that can specifically test the assumptions of the spectator lek hypothesis.
Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport | 2016
Shea M. Balish; Dan Conacher; Lori Dithurbide
Purpose: Preliminary findings suggest sport participation is positively associated with happiness. However, it is unknown if this association is universal and how sport compares to other leisure activities in terms of an association with happiness. This study had 3 objectives: (a) to test if sport membership is associated with happiness, (b) to test if this relationship is universal, and (c) to compare sport membership to other leisure activities. Method: Hierarchal Bernoulli modeling was used to analyze the 6th wave (2014) of the World Values Survey (nSs = 67,736, ncountries = 48). The critical variables included measures of membership in different leisure activities (e.g., sport membership) and self-reported happiness. Results: Even when controlling for known covariates such as perceived health, those who report sport/recreation membership are more likely to report being happy compared with non-sport members (OR = 1.38; 95% CI [1.24, 1.53]). Being a member of a sport organization had a greater association with happiness than did being a member of other leisure activities. Follow-up analyses suggested that this association is nearly universal. Conclusions: This study offers initial evidence that sport membership elicits happiness across many different societies. Although the causal direction remains unclear, this study establishes a positive association between happiness and sport membership. Future research should target the mechanism(s) of this effect, which we hypothesize are meaningful social relations.
Journal of Applied Sport Psychology | 2015
Mark W Surya; Alex J. Benson; Shea M. Balish; Mark A. Eys
A descriptive phenomenological approach guided our examination of athletes’ perceptions regarding group member interactions following an injury event. Semistructured interviews were conducted with male members (N = 10) of Canadian Interuniversity Sport basketball teams. Athletes described experiences in which a single injury elicited strategic shifts in team tactics and personnel, which led to role adjustments, changes in emotional climate, interpersonal tensions, and differing perceptions regarding emergent opportunities within the group. The events perceived to unfold within the group following an injury reveals the necessity to expand existing psychosocial models of sport injury.
Cogent psychology | 2016
Shea M. Balish; Robert O. Deaner; Scott Rathwell; Daniel Rainham; Chris M. Blanchard
Abstract Although countries’ gender equality is associated with important health outcomes, especially for females, it remains unclear whether gender equality is associated with leisure-time physical activity (LTPA). Data from 34 countries was acquired from the International Social Survey Program, the Pew Research Forum, the United Nations, and the World Bank. Separate analyses were conducted for 21,502 males and 26,652 females. Hierarchal nonlinear Bernoulli modeling was used to examine the association between gender equality and participation in LTPA. Both males and females residing in countries’ with higher gender equality were more likely (twice and three times more likely, respectively) to report weekly LTPA than those residing in countries characterized by low gender equality. These effects persisted even when controlling for individual (i.e. age, education) and country-level (i.e. population, gross domestic product) covariates. However, significant variation in LTPA persisted at the country level, suggesting the need for further research. These findings provide novel evidence that both males and females benefit from gender equality. To explain these findings, we hypothesize that increased gender equality decreases the average number of offspring and, in turn, allows mothers more time for leisure, and to invest more resources in both male and female offspring, which may increase LTPA.
Psychology of Sport and Exercise | 2014
Shea M. Balish; Colin D McLaren; Daniel Rainham; Chris M. Blanchard