Frontiers in Neuroscience (Mar 2021)

Testing the Effects of a Preceding Self-Control Task on Decision-Making in Soccer Refereeing

  • Chris Englert,
  • Anna Dziuba,
  • Geoffrey Schweizer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2021.638652
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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The present study tested the assumption that the momentary level of self-control strength affects the accuracy rates in a sports-related judgment and decision-making task. A total of N = 27 participants rated the veracity of 28 video-taped statements of soccer players who were interviewed by a non-visible referee after a critical game-related situation. In half of the videos, the players were lying, and in the other half, they were telling the truth. Participants were tested twice: once with temporarily depleted self-control strength and once with temporarily available self-control strength (order counterbalanced; measurements separated by exactly 7 days). Self-control strength was experimentally manipulated with the Stroop task. In line with two-process models of information processing, we hypothesized that under ego depletion, information is processed in a rather heuristic manner, leading to lower accuracy rates. Contrary to our expectations, the level of temporarily available self-control strength did not have an effect on accuracy rates. Limitations and implications for future research endeavors are discussed.

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