1. Football Team Social Structure and Perceived Support for Reporting Concussion Symptoms: Insights from a Social Network Analysis.
- Author
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Wayment, Heidi A., Huffman, Ann H., Lininger, Monica, and Doyle, Patrick C.
- Subjects
SOCIAL support ,SOCIAL networks ,SELF-evaluation ,PEER relations ,SURVEYS ,BRAIN concussion ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PROFESSIONAL identity ,FOOTBALL ,DATA analysis software ,STATISTICAL correlation - Abstract
Social network analysis (SNA) is a uniquely situated methodology to examine the social connections between players on a team, and how team structure may be related to self-reported team cohesion and perceived support for reporting concussion symptoms. Team belonging was positively associated with number of friend.ship ties (degree, r = .23, p < .05), intermediate ties between teammates (betweenness; r = .21, p < .05), and support from both teammates (r =.21, p < .05) and important others (r = .21, p < .05) for reporting concussion symptoms. Additionally, an SNA-derived measure of social influence, eigenvector centrality, was associated with football identity (r = .34, p <.01), and less support from important others (r = -.24, p < .05) regarding symptom reporting. Discussion focuses on why consideration of social influence dynamics may help improve concussion-related education efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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