Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/14359
Title: Decision-making of English Netball Superleague Umpires: Contextual and Dispositional Influences
Authors: Burnett, A
Bishop, D
Ashford, KJ
Williams, AM
Kinrade, N
Keywords: Avoidance;Reinvestment;Rumination;Referee;Bias;Pressure
Issue Date: 2017
Publisher: Elsevier
Citation: Psychology of Sport and Exercise, (2017)
Abstract: Objectives. The decisions made by officials have a direct bearing on the outcomes of competitive sport contests. In an exploratory study, we examine the interrelationships between the decisions made by elite netball umpires, the potential contextual and environmental influences (e.g., crowd size), and the umpires’ dispositional tendencies – specifically, their propensity to deliberate and ruminate on their decisions. Design/Method. Filmed footage from 60 England Netball Superleague matches was coded using performance analysis software. We measured the number of decisions made overall, and for home and away teams; league position; competition round; match quarter; and crowd size. Additionally, 10 umpires who officiated in the matches completed the Decision-Specific Reinvestment Scale (DSRS). Results. Regression analyses predicted that as home teams’ league position improved the number of decisions against away teams increased. A model comprising competition round and average league position of both teams predicted the number of decisions made in matches, but neither variable emerged as a significant predictor. The umpire analyses revealed that greater crowd size was associated with an increase in decisions against away teams. The Decision Rumination factor was strongly negatively related to the number of decisions in Quarters 1 and 3, this relationship was driven by fewer decisions against home teams by umpires who exhibited higher Rumination subscale scores. Conclusions. These findings strengthen our understanding of contextual, environmental, and dispositional influences on umpires’ decision-making behaviour. The tendency to ruminate upon decisions may explain the changes in decision behaviour in relation to the home team advantage effect.
URI: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/14359
ISSN: 1469-0292
Appears in Collections:Dept of Life Sciences Research Papers

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