Part One: The Nature, Historical Perspective and Conceptual Background on Interpersonal Coordination Tendencies 1. Interpersonal coordination in biological systems : The emergence of collective behaviours 2. What’s Come Before: A Historical Survey of Interpersonal Coordination Research 3. Unintended interpersonal coordination 4. Interpersonal coordination in cooperative tasks: Contextual Emergence, Symmetry and the Behavioural Dynamics of Social Coordination Part Two: Interpersonal Coordination in Competitive and Cooperative Performance Contexts 5. How do people coordinate in cooperative team sports: Perception of shared affordances underpin group synergistic behaviour 6. Interpersonal Coordination in Performing Arts: Inspiration or Constraint 7. Interpersonal Coordination in Music 8. Interpersonal Coordination in Dance 9. Interpersonal coordination in outdoor sports - Integration of experience and behavioural data to explore inter-personal coordination: a heuristic approach illustrated through outdoor activities 10. Crew rowing: an archetype of interpersonal coordination dynamics 11. Interpersonal coordination in competitive sports contexts: An Introduction 12.Emergence of interpersonal coordination tendencies and decision making behaviours in competitive sports: An ecological dynamics perspective 13. Interpersonal coordination in team sports 14. Interpersonal coordination in martial arts 15. Interpersonal coordination in racket sports 16. Impact of mental disorders on social motor coordination 17. Coordination in horse-rider interactions Part Three: Factors that Influence Interpersonal Coordination 18. Affordances and interpersonal coordination 19. Social Coordination of Verbal and Non-Verbal Behaviours 20. How fatigue constrains interpersonal coordination Part Four: Methods, Tools and Devices 21. Measuring interpersonal coordination: Methods for quantifying human interaction 22. Modelling interpersonal coordination 23. Technological advances in studying interpersonal coordination in social collectives 24. Issues and trends for future research and applications
Pedro Passos is Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Human
Kinetics at the University of Lisbon in Portugal. His research
involves the study of the dynamics of interpersonal coordination in
team sports. He has written numerous journal articles and book
chapters, and is the author or editor of four books. His
current research is on interpersonal coordination in social
systems and team sports, extending the paradigm of analysis to
video games and cooperative tasks, and searching for new methods of
analysis in collaboration with researchers in Portugal, across
Europe, Singapore, Australia and New Zealand.
Keith Davids is Professor of Motor Learning at the Centre for
Sports Engineering Research at Sheffield Hallam University in the
UK. His major research interest involves the study of movement
coordination and skill acquisition in sport. He is particularly
focused on understanding how to design representative learning and
performance evaluation environments in sport.
Jia Yi Chow is an Assistant Professor at the Physical Education and
Sports Science Academic Group, and also Assistant Dean in the
Office of Teacher Education at the National Institute of Education
(NIE), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. His area of
expertise is in examining multi-articular coordination and a
pedagogical approach underpinned by principles from a dynamical
systems theory (Nonlinear Pedagogy).
Ask a Question About this Product More... |