Research on the impact of official type and officiating expertise on visual tracking performance: based on the multiple identity tracking task
Rishu Wang, Yidong Wu, Qi Zhang

TL;DR
This study explores how the type of sports official and their expertise affect their visual tracking performance using specific tasks.
Contribution
The study introduces a classification of officials into interactors, reactors, and monitors and evaluates their visual tracking performance.
Findings
Official type significantly affects tracking accuracy, detection stimulus awareness rate, and tracking time.
Officiating expertise significantly influences tracking accuracy and detection stimulus awareness rate.
There is a positive correlation between detection stimulus awareness rate and tracking accuracy.
Abstract
Recent studies highlight the significance of visual cognition in sports officiating. This study investigates how official type and officiating expertise influence visual tracking performance using the Multiple Identity Tracking (MIT) and dot-detection tasks. 36 officials aged 20–38 years were recruited and classified into interactors (basketball referees), reactors (badminton judges), and monitors (gymnastics judges) according to official type, and into expert and non-expert groups according to officiating expertise. Results revealed significant main effect of official type on tracking accuracy (P < 0.001), detection stimulus awareness rate (P < 0.05), and tracking time (P < 0.001). Officiating expertise had a significant effect on tracking accuracy (P < 0.05), and detection stimulus awareness rate (P < 0.001). Notably, their interaction effect was not significant. Pearson's analysis…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSport Psychology and Performance · Motivation and Self-Concept in Sports · Sports Performance and Training
