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Journal Article

Citation

Mascarenhas DRD, Collins D, Mortimer P. J. Sport Exerc. Psychol. 2002; 24(3): 328-333.

Affiliation

1 University of Edinburgh.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2002, Human Kinetics Publishers)

DOI

10.1123/jsep.24.3.328

PMID

28682206

Abstract

Plessner and Betsch's (2001) investigation into officiating behavior may be representative of a shift from stress-oriented research (Anshel & Weinberg, 1995; Rainey & Winterich, 1995; Stewart & Ellery. 1996) to consideration of decision-making (Craven, 1998; Ford. Gallagher, Lacy, et al., 1999; Oudejans. Verheijen, Bakker, et al., 2000), the primary function of referees in any sport. Commendably, Plessner and Betsch have investigated the most important focus of referee performance, the application of the rules (Anshel, 1995). However, methodological weaknesses, together with a fundamental error in the attribution of causation to the findings, significantly dilute the paper's contribution to extending knowledge in this important area.


Language: en

Keywords

decision-making; judgment biases; soccer

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