DyNamic Interactive Anticipation–Time for a Paradigmatic Shift

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Abstract

Everyday human interactions require observers to anticipate the actions of others (e.g., when walking past another in a corridor or choosing where to hit a ground stroke in tennis). Yet, experimental paradigms that aim to examine anticipation continue to use simplistic designs that are not interactive and therefore fail to account for the real-life, social nature of these interactions. Here we propose a fundamental, paradigmatic shift toward a “dynamic interactive anticipation” paradigm that models real-life interactions. We propose that it will change the way behavioral experimentalists study anticipation and spark theory development by unravelling the mechanisms underlying anticipation in real-time interactions.

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Cañal-Bruland, R., & Mann, D. L. (2025). DyNamic Interactive Anticipation–Time for a Paradigmatic Shift. Sports Medicine, 55(3), 545–550. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40279-024-02135-9

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