Abstract
The present study was attempted to measure whether the dynamics of elementary coordination is influenced by an overarching temporal structure that is embedded in circadian rhythms (part 1) as well as the systemic proof associated with the intelligent capabilities (part 2). For part 1, evidence of entrainment or any influence of the embedding rhythm were examined on the stability or attractor location. The estimations from the dynamics of the relative phase between the two oscillations show that while (i) circadian effects under the artificially perturbed manipulation were not straightforward along the day-night temperature cycle, (ii) the circadian effect divided by the ordinary circadian seems to be constant along the day-night cycle. Corresponding to this evidence related to performance consequences depending on the organism and environmental interaction, the part 2 determined the impact of circadian (mis)alignment on biological functions and raised the possibility that the disruption of circadian systems may contribute to physical complications. The observations entail rules that self-attunement of current performance may develop not at a single component but across many nested, inter-connected scales. These inter-dependencies from different object phase may allow a potential context-dependent explanation for goal-oriented movements and the emergent assumption of a principle of organisms embedded into their environmental contexts.