Lopes de Lima, C. Z., de Sousa Fortes, L., Pires, D. A., Machado, H. E. S., Oliveira, A. D. S. D., Coswig, V. S. & Penna, E. M. (2025). Mental fatigue increases perception of effort but does not compromise the inhibitory control of football referees during a match simulation physical task. European Journal of Sport Science, 25 (3), e12222. Zugriff am 12.03.2025 unter https://doi.org/10.1002/ejsc.12222
APA (7th ed.) CitationLopes de Lima, C. Z., de Sousa Fortes, L., Pires, D. A., Machado, H. E. S., Oliveira, A. D. S. D., Coswig, V. S., & Penna, E. M. (2025). Mental fatigue increases perception of effort but does not compromise the inhibitory control of football referees during a match simulation physical task. European Journal of Sport Science, 25(3), e12222.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationLopes de Lima, C. Z., L. de Sousa Fortes, D. A. Pires, H. E. S. Machado, A. D. S. D. Oliveira, V. S. Coswig, and E. M. Penna. "Mental Fatigue Increases Perception of Effort but Does Not Compromise the Inhibitory Control of Football Referees During a Match Simulation Physical Task." European Journal of Sport Science 25, no. 3 (2025): e12222.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationLopes de Lima, C. Z., et al. "Mental Fatigue Increases Perception of Effort but Does Not Compromise the Inhibitory Control of Football Referees During a Match Simulation Physical Task." European Journal of Sport Science, vol. 25, no. 3, 2025, p. e12222.