Dynamics of Skill Acquisition 2/e

An Ecological Dynamics Approach

HUMAN KINETICSISBN: 9781492563228

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Sale price$189.00
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In stock

By Chris Button, Ludovic Seifert, Jia Yi Chow, Duarte Araujo, Keith Davids
Imprint:
HUMAN KINETICS
Release Date:

Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
288

Description

Chapter 1. Athletes and Sports Teams Considered as Complex Adaptive Systems Chapter 2. Physical Constraints on Coordination: Dynamical Systems Theory Chapter 3. Informational Constraints on Coordination: An Ecological Psychology Perspective Chapter 4. Intentionality, Cognition, and Decision Making in Sport Chapter 5. Understanding the Dynamics of Skill Acquisition Chapter 6. How Interacting Constraints Support a Nonlinear Pedagogy Chapter 7. Redefining Learning: Practical Issues for Representative Learning Design Chapter 8. Designing Individualized Practice Environments Chapter 9. Practice for Sports Teams Chapter 10. Modified Perceptual Training for Athletes Chapter 11. Practitioners as Designers Chapter 12. Expertise and Talent Development in Sport
Chris Button, PhD, is a professor and the dean of the School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Sciences at the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand. He received his PhD in sport and exercise science in 2000 from Manchester Metropolitan University in the United Kingdom. His doctoral research focused on coordination and interception skills and applying ecological concepts to the study of interceptive actions. Button is accredited as a biomechanist through Sport and Exercise Science New Zealand. He is also an executive committee member of the Australasian Skill Acquisition Network. Button regularly works with the coaches and athletes of High Performance New Zealand and has provided sport science support in netball, football (soccer), swimming, and motor sports. Button publishes his research in a variety of books and journals on sport science, pedagogy, and movement science. Such topics have attracted interest within both scientific and political circles, as evidenced by recent invitations to provide expertise for the New Zealand Ministry of Health, Water Safety New Zealand, High Performance Sport New Zealand, and others. He is also a soccer coach for junior and adult learners. Ludovic Seifert, PhD, is a professor at the University of Rouen Normandy. He is the vice dean of the Centre d'Etudes des Transformations des Activites Physiques et Sportives (CETAPS) lab and the head of the master's program in sport performance analysis. He obtained a certificate in physical education in 1998 and a PhD in sport science from the University of Rouen Normandy in 2003. Seifert's field of research relates to motor control and learning and expertise and talent development following an ecological dynamics approach. His emphasis focuses on movement coordination and visual-motor skills, with a particular interest in swimming and climbing. Such topics have led him to work closely with several French sport federations (such as swimming, climbing and mountaineering, and ice hockey) and professional clubs. His research has been published and cited extensively in peer-reviewed journals. Seifert is the university's representative for Ecological Dynamics & Sport Performance, an e-lab of UNESCO's UniTwin Complex Systems Digital Campus program. He is also certified as a mountain guide by the International Federation of Mountain Guides Association (IFMGA). Jia Yi Chow, PhD, is an associate professor in the physical education and sport science department in the National Institute of Education at Nanyang Technological University. He is also an associate dean in the Office of Teacher Education at the same institute. A physical educator by training, Chow's area of specialization is in motor control and learning. His key research work includes nonlinear pedagogy, investigation of multiarticular coordination changes, analysis of team dynamics from an ecological psychology perspective, and examining visual-perceptual skills in sports expertise. He works closely with colleagues and practitioners in the Singapore Ministry of Education, local sport institutes, and international collaborators to enhance the work on nonlinear pedagogy. Duarte Araujo, PhD, is an associate professor and director of the department of sport and health and faculty of human kinetics at the University of Lisbon in Portugal. He leads both the research center of this school, CIPER, as well as the Laboratory of Expertise in Sport. He is an associate editor of the journal Psychology of Sport and Exercise as well as the Journal of Expertise. Araujo's research on sport expertise and decision making, performance analysis, and affordances for physical activity has been funded by the Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia. He has published more than 130 papers in scientific journals (with over 4,500 citations in the Web of Science) and more than 15 books about expertise, team performance, variability, cognition, and decision making in sport. He also supervises several doctoral students from Portugal, Italy, and Australia. Keith Davids, PhD, is a professor of motor learning at the Sport and Human Performance Research Group at Sheffield Hallam University. He graduated from the University of London and obtained a PhD in psychology and physical education at the University of Leeds. He has previously held professorial positions in the United Kingdom (Manchester Metropolitan University), New Zealand (University of Otago), Australia (Queensland University of Technology), and Finland (Finnish Distinguished Professor in the faculty of sport and health sciences at the University of Jyvaeskylae). Davids' research program investigates sport performance, skill acquisition, and expertise enhancement in sport and how to design learning, training, and practice environments to successfully achieve these outcomes. He collaborates on research in sport, physical activity, and exercise with colleagues at universities in Spain, Portugal, France, Netherlands, Iran, Macedonia, New Zealand, Australia, and Finland. A large proportion of his scientific and practical research has been undertaken in collaboration with the New Zealand South Island Sports Academy, the Queensland Academy of Sport, the Australian Institute of Sport, Diving Australia, Cricket Australia, GB Cycling, and the English Institute of Sport.

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