Top-level professional football referees
have enhanced visual perception, which means that they are better at
spotting foul play and issuing the correct disciplinary action than
lower-level referees, according to new research published in the journal
Cognitive Research.
The researchers,
from Belgium and the UK, had 39 football referees from the top and
lower leagues in Belgium watch staged videos of fouls being committed
from the point-of-view of a referee on the football pitch. Eye-tracking
technology was used to assess their visual-search behaviour - that is
the location that the referees' eyes fixated on and for how long.
Professor Werner Helsen, co-lead author from the University of Leuven
in Belgium, said: "Our results show that elite referees have
visual-search behaviour patterns that make them better at assessing foul
play situations in football compared to lower league referees. When
watching open play fouls being committed, elite referees spend more time
fixating on the body part involved in the foul than other areas,
suggesting that they are focusing on and interpreting the most crucial
information within their visual display."
Visual-search behaviour is a primary skill utilised by professional
athletes that enables them to coordinate perceptual-cognitive function
with motor skills. Referees also rely heavily on visual-search behaviour
in order to rapidly translate what they see into a correct decision
based on the rules of the game. When asked to state if they thought the
open-play foul committed deserved a disciplinary sanction (no card,
yellow card or red card), elite referees made the correct decision with
an accuracy of 61%, compared to 45% amongst lower level referees.
Dr Jochim Spitz, co-lead author, said: "Visual-search behaviour is an
in-built cognitive function that can be improved through training and
development. Understanding what it is exactly that makes elite referees
able to make better decisions than lower-level referees could help
devise training programmes specifically aimed at improving visual-search
behaviour."
The video clips used in this study were filmed with the help of
competitive football players who were tasked with simulating a variety
of foul play scenarios including fouls in open play and from corner
kicks. The action was filmed from approximately 10 meters away to mimic
the proximity of a referee to the game in a real life situation. In
order to make the simulations as natural as possible, no specific
instructions were given to the players related to the type of foul that
should be executed. A total of 20 videos were made, 10 open-play
situations and 10 corner-kick situations, out of which three showed no
foul play.
In the open-play and corner-kick scenarios, there was no difference
between the numbers of locations that the referees focused on when
watching the videos but, importantly, the elite referees did spend more
time fixating on the contact zone between the attacker and the defender
than the non-elite referees. Analysing the data collected from incorrect
decisions made by referees, it was concluded that the fixation time
plays an important role translating perceived incidents into a correct
interpretation according to the 'Laws of the Game'.
Professor Werner Helsen added: "We can speculate from our results
that the level of experience in elite referees is translated into
long-term memory which allows their visual-search behaviour to be driven
by acquired knowledge. Sub-elite referees on the other hand have less
experience and seem to apply a more random control of visual fixation".
SOURCE:
MedicalXpress and Provided by:
BioMed Central



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