Santos Rodrigo, Duarte Ricardo, Davids Keith, Teoldo Israel
Núcleo de Pesquisa e Estudos em Futebol, Departamento de Educação Física, Universidade Federal de Viçosa, Viçosa, Brazil.
Faculdade de Motricidade Humana, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal.
Front Psychol. 2018 Dec 11;9:2550. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02550. eCollection 2018.
Interpersonal coordination in soccer has become a trending topic in sports sciences, and several studies have examined how interpersonal coordination unfolds at different levels (i.e., dyads, sub-groups, teams). Investigations have largely focused on interactional behaviors at micro and macro levels through tasks from dyadic (i.e., 1 vs. 1) to team (i.e., 11 vs. 11) levels. However, as the degree of representativeness of a task depends on the magnitude of the relationship between simulated and intended environments, it is necessary to address a discussion on the correspondence between competitive and practice/experimental settings in soccer. The aims of this paper are to: (i) provide a brief description of the main concepts underlying the subject of interpersonal coordination in sports teams; (ii) demonstrate, through exemplar research findings, how interpersonal coordination in soccer unfolds at different scales; and (iii), discuss how coaches and researchers may ensure representativeness for practice and experimental tasks. We observed that papers addressing the analysis of interpersonal coordination tendencies in soccer often resort to dyadic (one vs. one) or sub-group (many vs. many) experimental tasks, instead of full-sized (11 vs. 11) games. Consequently, the extent to which such patterns reflect those observed in competition is somewhat uncertain. The design of practice and/or experimental tasks that rely on sub-phases of the game (e.g., 1 vs. 1, 4 vs. 4) should ensure the preservation of players' behavior patterns in intended match conditions (11 vs. 11). This can be accomplished by measuring the level of action fidelity of the task, ensuring correspondence and successful transfer across contexts.
足球运动中的人际协调已成为体育科学领域的一个热门话题,已有多项研究探讨了人际协调在不同层面(即二元组、子群体、团队)是如何展开的。研究主要通过从二元组(即1对1)到团队(即11对11)层面的任务,聚焦于微观和宏观层面的互动行为。然而,由于一项任务的代表性程度取决于模拟环境与预期环境之间关系的大小,因此有必要讨论足球比赛中竞争环境与训练/实验环境之间的对应关系。本文的目的是:(i)简要描述运动队人际协调主题背后的主要概念;(ii)通过典型研究结果,展示足球运动中的人际协调在不同尺度上是如何展开的;(iii)讨论教练和研究人员如何确保训练和实验任务具有代表性。我们观察到,探讨足球人际协调倾向分析的论文通常采用二元组(一对一)或子群体(多对多)实验任务,而非全场(11对11)比赛。因此,这些模式在多大程度上反映了比赛中观察到的情况尚不确定。依赖比赛子阶段(如1对1、4对4)的训练和/或实验任务设计应确保球员在预期比赛条件(11对11)下的行为模式得以保留。这可以通过测量任务的动作逼真度水平来实现,确保不同情境之间的对应性和成功转换。