Nonlinear Dynamics, Psychology, and Life Sciences, Vol. 19, Iss. 4, Oct, 2015, pp. 345-394 @2015 Society for Chaos Theory in Psychology & Life Sciences Complex Adaptive Behavior and Dexterous Action Abstract: Dexterous action, as conceptualized by Bernstein in his
influential ecological analysis of human behavior,
is revealed in the ability to flexibly generate behaviors
that are adaptively tailored to the demands of the context
in which they are embedded. Conceived as complex adaptive behavior,
dexterity depends upon the qualities of robustness and degeneracy,
and is supported by the functional complexity of the agent-environment system.
Using Bernstein s and Gibson s ecological analyses of behavior situated in
natural environments as conceptual touchstones, we consider the
hypothesis that complex adaptive behavior capitalizes upon
general principles of self-organization. Here, we outline a
perspective in which the complex interactivity of nervous-system,
body, and environment is revealed as an essential resource for adaptive behavior.
From this perspective, we consider the implications for interpreting the
functionality and dysfunctionality of human behavior. This paper demonstrates that,
optimal variability, the topic of this special issue, is a
logical consequence of interpreting the functionality of
human behavior as complex adaptive behavior. Keywords: biomechanics, variability, robustness, dynamical systems theory, 1/f scaling, nonlinear analysis, synergetics, self-organized criticality, multifractals |