The current study aims to determine the relationship between gaze characteristics and decision-making of expert and near-expert assistant referees in judging offside in football. Six assistant referees with different levels of expertise judged set-played offside scenes on the football field, while their gaze behaviour was measured with a mobile eye tracker. The location of gaze, numbers of fixations and temporal characteristics of the final fixation around the decisive pass were analysed to compare the two expertise levels and response accuracies. Expert assistant referees judged more offside situations correctly than near-experts, however, without any differences in gaze patterns. Irrespective of expertise, decision accuracy was higher for...
In association football, the flash-lag effect appears to be a viable explanation for erroneous offsi...
Though the interaction of team members in sport has already been considered when analysing team expe...
It has been suggested that when footballers take penalty kicks they generally focus on the goalkeepe...
The current study aims to determine the relationship between gaze characteristics and decision-makin...
In foul decision-making by football referees, visual search is important for gathering task-specific...
In the present study, we investigated the accuracy of offside judgements of assistant referees in th...
It is well established that elite football referees possess superior anticipatory skills in specific...
This study investigated the offside decision-making process in association football. The first aim w...
Exploration of eye-movement behaviors of humans can provide insight into the processes used to infor...
This article reviews research on the gaze behavior of penalty takers in football. It focuses on how ...
Recent perspectives for the study of perceptual-motor expertise have highlighted the importance for ...
The offside decision-making process of international and national assistant referees (ARs) was evalu...
Compared to sports performers, relatively little is known about how sports officials make decisions ...
Current knowledge of gaze behavior in football has primarily originated from eye-tracking research i...
The different actors in association football are more and more subject to stress through increasing ...
In association football, the flash-lag effect appears to be a viable explanation for erroneous offsi...
Though the interaction of team members in sport has already been considered when analysing team expe...
It has been suggested that when footballers take penalty kicks they generally focus on the goalkeepe...
The current study aims to determine the relationship between gaze characteristics and decision-makin...
In foul decision-making by football referees, visual search is important for gathering task-specific...
In the present study, we investigated the accuracy of offside judgements of assistant referees in th...
It is well established that elite football referees possess superior anticipatory skills in specific...
This study investigated the offside decision-making process in association football. The first aim w...
Exploration of eye-movement behaviors of humans can provide insight into the processes used to infor...
This article reviews research on the gaze behavior of penalty takers in football. It focuses on how ...
Recent perspectives for the study of perceptual-motor expertise have highlighted the importance for ...
The offside decision-making process of international and national assistant referees (ARs) was evalu...
Compared to sports performers, relatively little is known about how sports officials make decisions ...
Current knowledge of gaze behavior in football has primarily originated from eye-tracking research i...
The different actors in association football are more and more subject to stress through increasing ...
In association football, the flash-lag effect appears to be a viable explanation for erroneous offsi...
Though the interaction of team members in sport has already been considered when analysing team expe...
It has been suggested that when footballers take penalty kicks they generally focus on the goalkeepe...