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Skip to Search Results- 1Adolescent athletes
- 1Coaches
- 1Communal coping
- 1Decision-making
- 1Deselection
- 1Exercise, Hematologic cancer survivors, intention-behavior gap
Results for "departments_tesim%3A%22Department of Physical Education and Sport Studies%22"
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Spring 2017
study examined coaches’ views on deselecting athletes from competitive female adolescent sport teams. Interviews were conducted with 22 head coaches (16 male, 6 female) of Under 15-Under 18 age group provincial level female soccer, basketball, volleyball, and ice hockey teams. Interpretive description
The overall purpose of this dissertation research was to gain a better understanding of deselection in competitive female youth sport by examining coaches’, athletes’, and parents’ experiences of deselection. Three studies were conducted, each focused on a different aspect of deselection. The first
-programmed decisions under conditions of certainty and uncertainty. When faced with uncertainty coaches relied on intuition. The second study examined how athletes and their parents cope with deselection from provincial sport teams using a communal coping perspective. Interviews were conducted with 14 female
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Understanding and influencing exercise behavior in hematologic cancer survivors: An examination of the intention-behavior gap
DownloadSpring 2018
-reported aerobic exercise behavior, QoL, fatigue, and program satisfaction at baseline and post-intervention (12 weeks). Results: Study 1 demonstrated a substantial I-B gap for aerobic and strength exercise in HCS, resulting in the majority of HCS being insufficiently active. Specifically, only about half
of those with an intention to do either regular aerobic or strength exercise, translated their intention into meeting the respective exercise guideline. As such, overall 22% of HCS were meeting the aerobic guideline only, 10% the strength guideline only, 22% both the aerobic and strength guideline
meaningful mental health improvements in HCS. Still, the absence of changes in physical health and fatigue is a common trend amongst remote exercise interventions and requires further investigation. Future phase III trials of M-PAC-based TC should look to demonstrate improvements in exercise behavior and
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Time Motion Characteristics and Heart Rate Profiles Displayed by Female University Ice Hockey Players
DownloadSpring 2015
The purpose of this study was to estimate the demands of female Canadian Interuniversity Sport (CIS) ice hockey through the use of time-motion analysis (TMA) and heart rate (HR) measurement during league games. A convenient sample of 22 female ice hockey players (14 forwards and 8 defense
regardless of the game-play situation. It was also apparent that female players display markedly high HR responses during game-play which was an indication of a substantial cardiovascular demand in the sport.
) underwent fitness testing and were filmed during league 3 CIS league games during which 13 players wore HR monitors. Time-motion analysis of the 3 games indicated that all players spent the majority of game time gliding forward (36.3 +/- 6.2%) and skating forward with moderate intensity (31.2 +/- 6.2