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Interpretation and application of the offside law by expert assistant referees: Perception of spatial positions in complex dynamic events on and off the field
Authors:Bart Gilis  Peter Catteeuw  Evelien Van Roie  Johan Wagemans
Institution:1. Department of Biomedical Kinesiology;2. Department of Psychology , Katholieke Universiteit Leuven , Leuven, Belgium
Abstract:Abstract

Baldo et al. (2002 Baldo, M. V. C., Ranvaud, R. D. and Morya, E. 2002. Flag errors in soccer games: The flash-lag effect brought to real life. Perception, 31: 12051210. Crossref], PubMed], Web of Science ®] Google Scholar]) and Helsen et al. (2006 Helsen, W., Gilis, B. and Weston, M. 2006. Errors in judging “offside” in association football: Test of the optical error versus the perceptual flash-lag hypothesis. Journal of Sports Sciences, 24: 521528. Taylor & Francis Online], Web of Science ®] Google Scholar]) considered the flash-lag effect to explain errors made by assistant referees when judging offside in association football. The main aims of the present study were as follows: (1) to determine whether the flash-lag effect emerges in offside situations on the field of play or off the field when presented as computer animations or as video footage of real-life matches; (2) to examine offside decision-making errors in two standards of assistant referee – international FIFA and Belgian national referees. The results support the flash-lag hypothesis in several ways. First, both the FIFA and Belgian assistant referees were more likely to make errors by raising their flag when they had to assess offside situations on the field of play and when presented as three-a-side computer animations. Second, more flag errors were made when the defender moved in the opposite direction to that of the attacker. Third, the strategy of raising the flag in case of doubt was not observed when an interpretation of the offside law had to be made about the involvement of play of an attacker. Future research is needed to examine the extent to which on- and off-the-field training sessions can be used as training tools to improve offside decision-making.
Keywords:Decision-making skills  expertise  flash-lag effect
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