Saturday, 10 July 2010

Refs Subconsciously Call More Fouls on Plays to the Left

Until we invent reliable robot soccer referees, fans have one more reason to suspect the refs of bias.
Referees are more likely to make foul calls when they see the action moving from right to left, or leftward, according to a new study by brain researchers at the University of Pennsylvania.
Twelve varsity soccer players were shown identical images of plays, with the only difference being that some viewed the images flipped horizontally, so there were right-to-left and left-to-right versions. The participants that saw the action as moving from right-to-left were statistically more likely to call a foul.
Other studies have shown that the direction in which people read and write leads to a bias toward rightward or leftward action. One study found that Italians were more likely to view a soccer goal as “stronger, faster and more beautiful” when it was presented with a left-to-right trajectory rather than the other way around, and that Arabic speakers showed the opposite bias.
Before we throw the human refs out in favor of robots, the bias that they found would need to be repeated with more participants, preferably with video, and with speakers of Arabic or other languages written right to left to confirm any correlation with reading and writing habits.
The study appeared online July 7 in PLoS One.
Image: Flikr/seriouslysilly
Jess McNally @'Wired Science'

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