Woods Carl T, Robertson Sam, Rudd James, Araújo Duarte, Davids Keith
Institute for Health and Sport, Victoria University, Melbourne, Australia.
Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, UK.
Sports Med Open. 2020 Oct 28;6(1):52. doi: 10.1186/s40798-020-00281-8.
Where do novel and innovative ideas in sport science come from? How do researchers and practitioners collectively explore the dynamic landscape of inquiry, problem, solution and application? How do they learn to skilfully navigate from current place and practice toward the next idea located beyond their current vantage point? These questions are not just of philosophical value but are important for understanding how to provide high-quality support for athletes and sport participants at all levels of expertise and performance. Grounded in concepts from social anthropology, and theoretically positioned within an ecological dynamics framework, this opinion piece introduces a hunter-gatherer model of human behaviour based on wayfinding, situating it as a conceptual guide for implementing innovations in sport science. Here, we contend that the embedded knowledge of a landscape that guides a successful hunting and gathering party is germane to the pragmatic abduction needed to promote innovation in sport performance, leading to the inquisition of new questions and ways of resolving performance-preparation challenges. More specifically, exemplified through its transdisciplinarity, we propose that to hunt 'new ideas' and gather translatable knowledge, sport science researchers and practitioners need to wayfind through uncharted regions located in new performance landscapes. It is through this process of navigation where individuals will deepen, enrich and grow current knowledge, 'taking home' new ideas as they find their way.
体育科学中的新颖创新理念源自何处?研究人员和从业者如何共同探索探究、问题、解决方案及应用的动态领域?他们如何学会巧妙地从当前的位置和实践迈向超越其当前有利视角的下一个理念?这些问题不仅具有哲学价值,对于理解如何为各级专业水平和表现的运动员及体育参与者提供高质量支持也很重要。基于社会人类学的概念,并在理论上置于生态动力学框架内,这篇观点文章引入了一种基于寻路的人类行为狩猎采集者模型,将其定位为体育科学中实施创新的概念指南。在此,我们认为,指导成功狩猎采集群体的对地形的内在知识与促进运动表现创新所需的实用溯因推理密切相关,从而引发对新问题及解决表现准备挑战方法的探究。更具体地说,通过其跨学科性举例说明,我们提出,为了“猎取”新想法并收集可转化的知识,体育科学研究人员和从业者需要在新的表现领域中穿越未知区域进行寻路。正是通过这个导航过程,个人将深化、丰富并拓展现有知识,在找到方向的同时“带回”新想法。