PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Kit clashes affect performance in football matches, new study shows

2021-06-23
(Press-News.org) The response times of footballers is slowed down when part of the kit worn by both teams is of the same colour, a new study shows. The research from the University of York revealed that when players have any kit colour clash - either shirt or shorts - it takes them twice as long to find a fellow player on the pitch. Study authors are calling for a change in the laws of the game or for clearer guidance. Researchers used two experiments to investigate how kit variations affect the visual search for teammates. Their first experiment confirmed that a player's ability to discriminate is slower when playing in crossed kits, for example red shirts-blue shorts versus blue shirts-red shorts. The second experiment found that there was significant confusion when both teams wore the same coloured shorts and that there were quicker response times occurring for both teams when there was no overlap in shorts colour. First author, former graduate, Liam Burnell from the Department of Psychology said: "We found that where for example one team wears white tops and red shorts and the other wears red tops and white shorts the search time for a fellow team player is affected. "With crossed conditions also impairing the ability to discriminate two teams quickly and accurately, rules that prevent this from occurring may be beneficial in preventing misplaced passes, and incorrect refereeing decisions." The study cites examples including the 2017 English Football League Cup Final where Manchester United played Southampton in which the players were wearing crossed kits of red and white. A Southampton goal was controversially disallowed when the assistant referee had to make an offside call. Liam Burnell added: "This could have implications for the laws of the game, with current guidelines only prompting a change in kit when the referee believes kits to make teams indistinguishable. There is currently no requirement for teams to wear different shorts colours, and guidelines remain pretty vague as to what constitutes a kit clash." The study also made some preliminary investigations into the role different strip colours have in player detectability when set against stadium backgrounds as they set out to explore whether Ferguson's infamous claims that his players couldn't see each other in their 1996 clash against Southampton could carry any truth. Researchers also cited examples including comments from the then Wales manager, Chris Coleman, before a World Cup qualifier against Austria saying that no one wanted to play in grey as it was hard to distinguish players. Derek Adams in 2017, the then Plymouth Argyle manager also commented on their dark green strip at the time, reflecting on how they had changed the kit a little by bringing in white socks to help players because the strip blended in with the seating and the grass. Study supervisor, Professor Peter Thompson from the Department of Psychology said: "These reports suggest that strips including those that are grey and dark coloured do not 'pop-out' from the background, a problem which may be exacerbated when the team strip is close in colour to the stadium seating and particularly when playing in an empty stadium." The research was conducted using graphic images from video games and alternating kit colours which were then transposed onto different backgrounds. Participants' response time in identifying the different teams was then monitored.

INFORMATION:

The paper, Finding Neymar: the role of colour in the detection and discrimination of football kits is published in the journal, Perception.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Synthesis of a near-infrared light absorbing macrocyclic aromatic compound

Synthesis of a near-infrared light absorbing macrocyclic aromatic compound
2021-06-23
Profs. Okujima and Uno at Ehime University, in collaboration with Prof. Kobayashi at Shinshu University, reported the selective synthesis, the molecular structure, optical properties and electronic structure of cyclo[9]pyrrole, a ring-expanded porphyrin consisting of directly connected pyrrole rings. Porphyrins, which are well-known natural porphyrin molecules, e.g. heme and chlorophyll, are attractive for use in practical materials because of the easy optimization of their optical and physical properties by conjugation expansion and functionalization. In 2002, Sessler reported the first synthesis of cyclo[n]pyrrole (n: ...

Earth-like biospheres on other planets may be rare

Earth-like biospheres on other planets may be rare
2021-06-23
A new analysis of known exoplanets has revealed that Earth-like conditions on potentially habitable planets may be much rarer than previously thought. The work focuses on the conditions required for oxygen-based photosynthesis to develop on a planet, which would enable complex biospheres of the type found on Earth. The study is published today in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. The number of confirmed planets in our own Milky Way galaxy now numbers into the thousands. However planets that are both Earth-like and in the habitable zone - the region around a star where the temperature is just right for liquid water to exist on the surface - are much less common. At the moment, only a handful of such rocky and potentially habitable exoplanets ...

Influence of land use on soil erosion in European Russia for the last 30 years

Influence of land use on soil erosion in European Russia for the last 30 years
2021-06-23
Research Associate Artyom Gusarov studied a vast array of erosion data to make a general takeaway that soil erosion and river sediment load in the aforementioned region has significantly decreased throughout the post-Soviet period. "The decrease has been especially profound in the forest steppe, a part of which covers the Republic of Tatarstan, because of the combined influence of climate change and land cultivation," explains Gusarov. "To the north of the forest steppe, in the southern part of the boreal zone, the anthropogenic factor was the primary influence on the changes in soil erosion, at least in the east of the East European Plain. ...

10 keys to integrating health into urban and transport planning

10 keys to integrating health into urban and transport planning
2021-06-23
As much as 20% of premature mortality can be attributed to poor urban and transport planning. Nevertheless, quantitative indicators to guide the integration of health components into urban design have been lacking. To address this gap, a team from the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), a centre supported by the "la Caixa" Foundation, has identified 10 principles--and corresponding indicators--to help urban planners incorporate public health into their work. The new study, published in the International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health, was undertaken at the request of the Directorate-General for Environmental Policies and the Natural Environment, which forms ...

Outstanding organic solar cells' performance achieved by using new technology

Outstanding organic solar cells performance achieved by using new technology
2021-06-23
Organic solar elements with the self-assembling molecular-thin layer (SAM) of hole-transporting material, the technology, which was used in producing a record-breaking tandem solar cell, achieved 18.4 power conversion efficiency. The invention of Lithuanian chemists working at Kaunas University of Technology (KTU), commercialized by several global companies proved versatile and applicable to different solar technologies. Organic solar cells are made of common organic elements such as carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, fluorine, oxygen, and sulphur. Their raw materials are cheap, abundant, and can ...

China's EarthLab begins trials as country's first facility exploring Earth system interactions

Chinas EarthLab begins trials as countrys first facility exploring Earth system interactions
2021-06-23
The Earth is a sphere, and it comprises spheres: atmosphere, hydrosphere, cryosphere, lithosphere and biosphere -- in short, all of the cycles that interact to influence Earth's weather and climate. Now, to better research how the spheres interact and impact the planet, China is launching EarthLab in Beijing. On June 23, after EarthLab's opening ceremony, researchers will begin trials to demonstrate the facility's ability to integrate simulations and observations to more accurately project outcomes and provide a scientific foundation to predict and mitigate such things as natural weather disasters. EarthLab's ...

The origins of farming insects

The origins of farming insects
2021-06-23
A beetle bores a tree trunk to build a gallery in the wood in order to protect its lay. As it digs the tunnel, it spreads ambrosia fungal spores that will feed the larvae. When these bore another tree, the adult beetles will be the transmission vectors of the fungal spores in another habitat. This mutualism among insects and ambrosia fungi could be more than 100 years old --more than what was thought to date-- according to an article published in the journal Biological Reviews. The study analyses for the first time the symbiotic associations and the coevolution between ambrosia fungi and beetles from a paleontological perspective using the Cretaceous ...

Asian elephants do more than just trumpet -- they buzz their lips to squeak

Asian elephants do more than just trumpet -- they buzz their lips to squeak
2021-06-23
Everybody from a child knows that elephants trumpet. Over the past decades research in general and at the University of Vienna has mainly studied the elephants low-frequency rumble. Its fundamental frequency reaches into the infrasonic range below the human hearing threshold. This call is produced by the elephant´s massive vocal folds. Much less was known about how elephants produce their higher pitched sounds, trumpets and squeaks. The following rule generally applies to sound production in mammals: the larger the vocal fold, the lower the calls fundamental frequency. Conversely the size of the vocal folds sets an upper limit to the fundamental frequencies that can be reached. The high-pitched squeak only Asian but not African elephants ...

First clear view of a boiling cauldron where stars are born

First clear view of a boiling cauldron where stars are born
2021-06-23
University of Maryland researchers created the first high-resolution image of an expanding bubble of hot plasma and ionized gas where stars are born. Previous low-resolution images did not clearly show the bubble or reveal how it expanded into the surrounding gas. The researchers used data collected by the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA) telescope to analyze one of the brightest, most massive star-forming regions in the Milky Way galaxy. Their analysis showed that a single, expanding bubble of warm gas surrounds the Westerlund 2 star cluster and disproved earlier studies suggesting there may be two bubbles surrounding Westerlund 2. The researchers also identified the source of the bubble ...

Language trade-off? No, bilingual children reliably acquire English by age 5

Language trade-off? No, bilingual children reliably acquire English by age 5
2021-06-23
In the United States, more than 12 million children hear a minority language at home from birth. More than two-thirds hear English as well, and they reach school age with varying levels of proficiency in two languages. Parents and teachers often worry that acquiring Spanish will interfere with children's acquisition of English. A first-of-its kind study in U.S.-born children from Spanish-speaking families led by researchers at Florida Atlantic University finds that minority language exposure does not threaten the acquisition of English by children in the U.S. and that there is no trade-off ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Hornets found to be primary pollinators of two Angelica species

Aspirin vs placebo as adjuvant therapy for breast cancer

Association of new-onset seizures with SARS-CoV-2 vaccines

How can forests be reforested in a climate-friendly way?

More plants on the menu of ancient hunter-gatherers

The aspirin conundrum: navigating negative results, age, aging dynamics and equity

Cancer screening rates are significantly lower in US federally qualified health centers

Nature's nudge: Study shows green views lead to healthier food choices

AI algorithms can determine how well newborns nurse, study shows

Scientists develop new organoid model to study thymus function

A revised classification of primary iron overload syndromes

Expanding health equity by including nursing home residents in clinical trials

Identification and exploration of transcripts involved in antibiotic resistance mechanism of two critical superbugs

Quantum fiber optics in the brain enhance processing, may protect against degenerative diseases

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai names Miriam Merad, MD, PhD, as Dean for Translational Research and Therapeutic Innovation

Details of hurricane Ian’s aftermath captured with new remote sensing method

Robots can’t outrun animals. A new study explores why

The Human Immunome Project unveils scientific plan to decode and model the immune system

New research funding awarded to assess the role of race in predicting heart disease

Exploring the role of seven key genes in breast cancer: insights from in silico and in vitro analyses

The therapeutic effects of baicalein on the hepatopulmonary syndrome in the rat model of chronic common bile duct ligation

Development and characterization of honey-containing nanoemulsion for topical delivery

Decoding cellular ‘shape-shifters’

"Seeing the invisible": new tech enables deep tissue imaging during surgery

After 25 years, researchers uncover genetic cause of rare neurological disease

Probing the effects of interplanetary space on asteroid Ryugu

T. rex not as smart as previously claimed, scientists find

Breakthrough in brown fat research: Researchers from Denmark and Germany have found brown fat’s “off-switch”

Tech Extension Co. and Tech Extension Taiwan to build next-generation 3D integration manufacturing lines using Tokyo Tech's BBCube Technology

Atomic nucleus excited with laser: a breakthrough after decades

[Press-News.org] Kit clashes affect performance in football matches, new study shows