投手手型对投球判罚行为的影响:对棒球裁判员进行的 fMRI 研究带来的启示。

Psychophysiology Pub Date : 2024-03-01 Epub Date: 2024-01-12 DOI:10.1111/psyp.14501
Yin-Hua Chen, Shih-Kuei Huang
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摘要

这项功能磁共振成像研究深入探讨了经验和投手手型对棒球裁判员投球判罚行为的影响。研究人员要求专家级和中级裁判对左撇子和右撇子投手的投球录像做出球/三振判罚,并在扫描过程中评定其判罚的确定性。行为结果重复了之前的研究结果,即专家级裁判员比中级裁判员更有把握,但并不更准确或更快,这表明,作为体育官员,裁判员可能要学会投射信心,以保持对比赛的控制。在神经水平上,专家级裁判在动作观察网络、背侧纹状体和小脑中表现出更广泛、更明显的激活。这些神经反应的增强可能与他们在多年裁判工作中磨练出来的对投球动作和球轨迹的视觉处理能力增强有关。值得注意的是,专家级和中级裁判在判断左撇子投手投出的球时,准确性都比右撇子投手低。这些准确性上的挑战与上述脑区较弱的神经激活相对应,这意味着在处理很少遇到的左撇子投手的特定视觉细节时存在困难。此外,正如右侧运动前皮层激活较低所显示的那样,尤其是在左撇子投球时,反应时间稍长,不确定性降低,这突出表明了预测处理方面的问题。总之,我们的研究结果阐明了投手的手型对棒球裁判的投球判罚行为的影响,并扩展了目前对体育裁判的感知和决策行为的理解。
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The influence of pitcher handedness on pitch-calling behavior: Insights from fMRI study on baseball umpires.

This functional magnetic resonance imaging study delves into the impact of experience and pitcher handedness on the pitch-calling behavior of baseball umpires. Expert and intermediate umpires were asked to make ball/strike calls on videotaped pitches of left- and right-handed pitchers and rate their certainty for the call while undergoing scanning. Behavioral results replicated previous findings that expert umpires were more certain but not more accurate or quicker than intermediate umpires, suggesting that, as sports officials, umpires may learn to project confidence to maintain control of the game. At the neural level, expert umpires exhibited more extensive and pronounced activations within the action observation network, dorsal striatum, and cerebellum. These heightened neural responses were probably associated with their enhanced visual processing abilities for pitching action and ball trajectory, honed over years of officiating. Notably, both expert and intermediate umpires exhibited decreased accuracy when judging pitches from left-handed pitchers compared to right-handed ones. These challenges in accuracy corresponded with weaker neural activations in the aforementioned brain regions, implying difficulties in processing specific visual details of the rarely encountered left-handed pitchers. Moreover, slightly longer reaction times and reduced uncertainty were observed particularly for left-handed ball pitches, as revealed by lower activation in the right premotor cortex, highlighting issues with predictive processing. In summary, our findings shed light on the influence of pitcher handedness on the pitch-calling behavior of baseball umpires and extend the current understanding of the perceptual and decision-making behavior of sports officials.

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