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Disciplinarity and sport science in Europe: A statistical and sociological study of ECSS conference abstracts
Authors:Stéphane Champely  Patrick Fargier  Jean Camy
Institution:1. EA 7428 L-VIS (Laboratoire sur les Vulnérabilités et l'Innovation dans le Sport), Université Lyon 1, Villeurbanne, Francestephane.champely@univ-lyon1.fr;3. EA 7424 LIBM (Laboratoire Interuniversitaire de Biologie de la Motricité), Université Lyon 1, Villeurbanne, France;4. EA 7428 L-VIS (Laboratoire sur les Vulnérabilités et l'Innovation dans le Sport), Université Lyon 1, Villeurbanne, France
Abstract:Abstract

Abstracts of European College of Sports Science conferences (1995–2014) are studied. The number of abstracts has been increasing regularly (+90 per year). This rise is in recent years largely due to extra-European countries. The magnitude and accumulation of the different topics of discussion are examined. An operational criterion determines four stages of evolution of a topic: social network, cluster, specialty, and discipline. The scientific production can, therefore, be classified as disciplinary or non-disciplinary. The disciplinary part is more important but has been less dynamic recently. The cognitive content of sport science is then explored through a multidimensional scaling of the topics based on the keywords used in the abstracts. Three areas are visible: social sciences and humanities, sports medicine and physiology, and biomechanics and neurophysiology. According to the field theory of Bourdieu (1975 Bourdieu, P. (1975). The specificity of the scientific field and the social condition of the progress of reason. Social Science Information, 14(6), 1947. doi:10.1177/053901847501400602Crossref], Web of Science ®] Google Scholar]), three scientific habitus are distinguished. The logic of academic disciplinary excellence is the consequence of the autonomy of this scientific field, its closure, peer-review process, and barriers to entry. The distribution of scientific capital and professional capital is unequal across the three areas. Basically, conservation strategies of academic disciplinary excellence are predicted in biomechanics and neurophysiology, subversion strategies of interdisciplinarity based on professional concerns can appear in the sports medicine and physiology area, and critical strategies of interdisciplinarity based on social utility in social sciences and humanities. Moreover, additional tensions within these areas are depicted. Lastly methods based on co-citations of disciplines and boundary objects are proposed to find tangible patterns of multidisciplinarity confirming these strategies.
Keywords:Sociology of science  sport science  Europe  disciplines  interdisciplinarity  Bourdieu
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