Judgment, Decision-making and Success in SportISBN: 978-0-470-69453-4
Paperback
232 pages
September 2011, Wiley-Blackwell
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1.1 Maximization and optimization in sport.
1.2 JDM history.
1.3 The development of JDM research in sport.
1.4 Rationale and structure of this book.
2. Theories of (social) judgment.
2.1 Psychophysics.
2.2 Social Judgment Theory.
2.3 Social cognition.
2.4 Summary.
3. Theories of decision making.
3.1 Subjective Expected Utility Theory.
3.2 Prospect Theory.
3.3 Decisional Field Theory.
3.4 Simple heuristic approach.
3.5 Summary.
4. Expertise in JDM.
4.1 What are the components of expertise in JDM?
4.2 How can we measure JDM expertise?
4.3 How can we explain JDM expertise?
4.4 How can we develop JDM expertise?
4.5 Summary.
5. Athletes.
5.1 Judging one’s own performance.
5.2 What choices are athletes confronted with?
5.3 How do athletes choose?
5.4 JDM training for athletes.
5.5 Summary.
6. Managers and Coaches.
6.1 JDM as a leadership task.
6.2 Managerial JDM.
6.3 Coaches' JDM.
7. Referees.
7.1 The tasks of referees.
7.1 Perceptual limitations.
7.2 Prior knowledge.
7.4. Rules of information integration.
7.5. Improving referees' JDM.
8. Observers.
8.1 Biases in judgments of sport performance.
8.2 Predictions and betting.
References.
Index.