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Dive into the research topics where Sofia Fonseca is active.

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Featured researches published by Sofia Fonseca.


Journal of Motor Behavior | 2009

Interpersonal Pattern Dynamics and Adaptive Behavior in Multiagent Neurobiological Systems: Conceptual Model and Data

Pedro Passos; Duarte Araújo; Keith Davids; Luís F. Gouveia; Sidónio Serpa; João Milho; Sofia Fonseca

ABSTRACT Ecological dynamics characterizes adaptive behavior as an emergent, self-organizing property of interpersonal interactions in complex social systems. The authors conceptualize and investigate constraints on dynamics of decisions and actions in the multiagent system of team sports. They studied coadaptive interpersonal dynamics in rugby union to model potential control parameter and collective variable relations in attacker–defender dyads. A videogrammetry analysis revealed how some agents generated fluctuations by adapting displacement velocity to create phase transitions and destabilize dyadic subsystems near the try line. Agent interpersonal dynamics exhibited characteristics of chaotic attractors and informational constraints of rugby union boxed dyadic systems into a low dimensional attractor. Data suggests that decisions and actions of agents in sports teams may be characterized as emergent, self-organizing properties, governed by laws of dynamical systems at the ecological scale. Further research needs to generalize this conceptual model of adaptive behavior in performance to other multiagent populations.


Journal of Motor Behavior | 2011

Interpersonal Distance Regulates Functional Grouping Tendencies of Agents in Team Sports

Pedro Passos; João Milho; Sofia Fonseca; João Borges; Duarte Araújo; Keith Davids

Abstract The authors examined whether, similar to collective agent behaviors in complex, biological systems (e.g., schools of fish and colonies of ants), performers in team sports displayed functional coordination tendencies, based on local interaction rules during performance. To investigate this issue, they used videogrammetry and digitizing procedures to observe interpersonal interactions in common 4 versus 2 + 2 subphases of the team sport of rugby union, involving 16 participants aged between 16 and 17 years of age. They observed pattern-forming dynamics in attacking subunits (n = 4 players) attempting to penetrate 2 defensive lines (n = 2 players in each). Data showed that within each attacking subunit, the 4 players displayed emergent functional grouping tendencies that differed between the 2 defensive lines. Results confirmed that grouping tendencies in attacking subunits of team games are sensitive to different task constraints, such as relative positioning to nearest defenders. It was concluded that running correlations were particularly useful for measuring the level of interpersonal coordination in functional grouping tendencies within attacking subunits.


Journal of Motor Behavior | 2012

Approximate Entropy Normalized Measures for Analyzing Social Neurobiological Systems

Sofia Fonseca; João Milho; Pedro Passos; Duarte Araújo; Keith Davids

ABSTRACT When considering time series data of variables describing agent interactions in social neurobiological systems, measures of regularity can provide a global understanding of such system behaviors. Approximate entropy (ApEn) was introduced as a nonlinear measure to assess the complexity of a system behavior by quantifying the regularity of the generated time series. However, ApEn is not reliable when assessing and comparing the regularity of data series with short or inconsistent lengths, which often occur in studies of social neurobiological systems, particularly in dyadic human movement systems. Here, the authors present two normalized, nonmodified measures of regularity derived from the original ApEn, which are less dependent on time series length. The validity of the suggested measures was tested in well-established series (random and sine) prior to their empirical application, describing the dyadic behavior of athletes in team games. The authors consider one of the ApEn normalized measures to generate the 95th percentile envelopes that can be used to test whether a particular social neurobiological system is highly complex (i.e., generates highly unpredictable time series). Results demonstrated that suggested measures may be considered as valid instruments for measuring and comparing complexity in systems that produce time series with inconsistent lengths.


Journal of Sports Sciences | 2018

Predicting volleyball serve-reception at group level

Ana A. Paulo; Frank T. J. M. Zaal; Ludovic Seifert; Sofia Fonseca; Duarte Araújo

ABSTRACT In a group-serve-reception task, how does serve-reception become effective? We addressed “who” receives/passes the ball, what task-related variables predict action mode selection and whether the action mode selected was associated with reception efficacy. In 182 serve-receptions we tracked the ball and the receivers’ heads with two video-cameras to generate 3D world-coordinates reconstructions. We defined receivers’ reception-areas based on Voronoi diagrams (VD). Our analyses of the data showed that this approach was accurate in describing “who” receives the serve in 95.05% of the times. To predict action mode selection, we used variables related to: serve kinematics, receiver’s movement and on-court positioning, the relation between receiver and his closest partner, and interactions between receiver-ball and receiver-target. Serve’s higher initial velocities together with higher maximum height, as well as smaller longitudinal distances between receiver and target increased the chances for the use of the overhand pass. Conversely, decreasing alignment of the receiver with the ball and the target increased the chances of using the underhand-lateral pass. Finally, the use of the underhand-lateral pass was associated with lower quality receptions. Behavioural variability’s relevance for serve-reception training is discussed.


Human Movement Science | 2012

Spatial dynamics of team sports exposed by Voronoi diagrams

Sofia Fonseca; João Milho; Bruno Travassos; Duarte Araújo


Psychology of Sport and Exercise | 2011

Territorial gain dynamics regulates success in attacking sub-phases of team sports

Vanda Correia; Duarte Araújo; Keith Davids; Orlando Fernandes; Sofia Fonseca


Frontiers in Psychology | 2016

Predicting Volleyball Serve-Reception

Ana A. Paulo; Frank T. J. M. Zaal; Sofia Fonseca; Duarte Araújo


Revista Lusofona De Educacao | 2012

A Universidade Portuguesa: o abrir do fecho de acesso - o caso dos maiores de 23 anos

José Viegas Brás; Edineide Jezine; Sofia Fonseca; Maria Neves Gonçalves


Revista Brasileira de Ciências do Esporte | 2018

Faster balls increase the probability of scoring a goal in female and male elite goalball

Márcio Pereira Morato; Rafael Pombo Menezes; Sofia Fonseca; Otávio Luis Piva da Cunha Furtado


Gymnasium - Revista de Educação Física, Desporto e Saúde | 2013

A MANIPULAÇÃO DO NÚMERO DE TOQUES NA BOLA EM JOGOS REDUZIDOS: INFLUÊNCIA NA INTERAÇÃO ESPACIAL DE JOGADORES DE FUTEBOL

Filipe Celikkaya; Sofia Fonseca

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João Milho

Instituto Superior de Engenharia de Lisboa

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Keith Davids

Sheffield Hallam University

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Pedro Passos

Technical University of Lisbon

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Ana A. Paulo

Technical University of Lisbon

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Frank T. J. M. Zaal

University Medical Center Groningen

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Bruno Travassos

University of Beira Interior

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