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Interpersonal coordination is an important general feature of social systems. From getting on a crowded bus to performance sport and creative arts, our behaviour is constrained by the need to continually interact with others. This book examines how interpersonal coordination tendencies in social systems emerge, across a range of performance contexts and at different scales, with the aim of helping practitioners create learning environments to improve performance. It is fascinating reading for anyone working in movement science, psychology, education or sport science or those areas of…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Interpersonal coordination is an important general feature of social systems. From getting on a crowded bus to performance sport and creative arts, our behaviour is constrained by the need to continually interact with others. This book examines how interpersonal coordination tendencies in social systems emerge, across a range of performance contexts and at different scales, with the aim of helping practitioners create learning environments to improve performance. It is fascinating reading for anyone working in movement science, psychology, education or sport science or those areas of professional practice involving interpersonal coordination, such as work psychology, dance or music.
Autorenporträt
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).