Training of perceptual-cognitive skills in offside decision making

This study investigates the effect of two off-field training formats to improve offside decision making. One group trained with video simulations and another with computer animations. Feedback after every offside situation allowed assistant referees to compensate for the consequences of the flash-lag effect and to improve their decision-making accuracy. First, response accuracy improved and flag errors decreased for both training groups implying that training interventions with feedback taught assistant referees to better deal with the flash-lag effect. Second, the results demonstrated no effect of format, although assistant referees rated video simulations higher for fidelity than computer animations. This implies that a cognitive correction to a perceptual effect can be learned also when the format does not correspond closely with the original perceptual situation. Off-field offside decision-making training should be considered as part of training because it is a considerable help to gain more experience and to improve overall decision-making performance.
© Copyright 2010 Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology. Human Kinetics. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:social sciences
Tagging:Abseits
Published in:Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology
Language:English
Published: 2010
Online Access:http://journals.humankinetics.com/jsep-back-issues/jsep-volume-32-issue-6-december-/training-of-perceptual-cognitive-skills-in-offside-decision-making
Volume:32
Issue:6
Pages:845-861
Document types:article
Level:advanced