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The widespread inferential understanding of human action attributes to the brain the power of modelling actions and predicting immediate changes in environmental circumstances. However, an ecological rationale proposes that sport performance is founded on coupled perception and action, avoiding the need for the brain, as a mediator, to be lagging behind immediate corporeal contact with the sport environment. Here, a theory of cognizant action is presented where behaviour is understood in terms of self-organised action, shaped by a performer’s complex skills, directed towards perceived affordances. Cognizant action is defined as the conservation of intentionality by coupled perception and action. Being oriented towards action possibilities (affordances), cognizant action self-organizes in every performance environment, and at the same time it is constrained by performers’ skills. Accordingly, the study of cognizant action demands representative experimental designs and analysis of eco-physical variables to understand sport performance. Current debates include the role of knowledge, the symmetry between performer and environment, and team cognition. Future research might be directed to test tensegrity as well as ‘strong’ anticipation in individual and team sport tasks. • Sport performance is about the process and the product of perceiving and acting • Perception-action coupling is the foundation of performance • Cognizant action is oriented towards affordances • Cognizant action is the conservation of intentionality by perception-action cycles • Sport performance is seized by eco-physical variables in representative settings • Future research might address tensegrity and ‘strong’ anticipation in sport
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Duarte Araújo
University of Lisbon
Henrique Lopes
University of Lisbon
David Farrokh
Sheffield Hallam University
Psychology of sport and exercise
University of Lisbon
Sheffield Hallam University
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Araújo et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0fa3eb42b7486443fe3bdd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychsport.2025.102935