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Personal Distances of Squash and Badminton Players: A Preliminary Study

Martin J. Lee and Hilary Roberts

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Causal Attributions of Winners and Losers in Individual Competitive Sports: Toward a Reformulation of the Self-Serving Bias

Melvin M. Mark, Manette Mutrie, David R. Brooks, and Dorothy V. Harris

The achievement oriented world of sport has been a frequent setting for the study of attributions for success and failure. However, it may be inappropriate to generalize from previous research to attributions made in actual, organized, competitive, individual sports because previous studies suffer from one or more of three characteristics which may limit their generalizability to such settings: previous studies have employed novel tasks, staged the competition for research purposes, or examined attribution about team success or failure. The present research was conducted (a) to avoid these limitations to generalizability, (b) to examine whether competitors who differ in experience or ability make different attributions for success and failure, and (c) to employ an attribution measure that does not rely too much on the researchers' interpretation of the subjects' attributions as past techniques have done. Two studies were conducted examining the attributions made by winners and losers in the second round of organized squash (Study 1) and racquetball (Study 2) tournaments. Subjects reported their attributions on the Causal Dimension Scale developed by Russell (1982). Results indicate no difference between players of different experience/ability levels. In addition, winners and losers did not differ in the locus of causality of their attributions, but winners, relative to losers, made more stable and controllable attributions. Implications of these results were discussed first in terms of the debate over self-serving bias in attributions, and second, in terms of the effects of ability and experience on attributions.

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The Influence of Environmental Constraints in 360° Videos on Decision Making in Soccer

Lisa Musculus, Jurek Bäder, Lukas Sander, and Tobias Vogt

making in sports . International Review of Sport and Exercise Psychology, 7 ( 1 ), 251 – 273 . 10.1080/1750984X.2014.932424 Murray , S. , James , N. , Perš , J. , Mandeljc , R. , & Vučković , G. ( 2018 ). Using a situation awareness approach to determine decision-making behaviour in squash

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Visual Performance and Sports: A Scoping Review

Liam Lochhead, Jiren Feng, Daniel M. Laby, and Lawrence G. Appelbaum

.R. ( 2014 ). Improved vision and on-field performance in baseball through perceptual learning . Current Biology, 24 ( 4 ), R146 – R147 . 10.1016/j.cub.2014.01.004 Eime , R.M. , Finch , C.F. , Sherman , C.A. , & Garnham , A.P. ( 2002 ). Are squash players protecting their eyes? Injury