Article
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Preserved in Portico This version is not peer-reviewed
Making Referee Decisions with Machine Learning in the Sport of Squash
Version 1
: Received: 16 December 2023 / Approved: 17 December 2023 / Online: 18 December 2023 (08:10:12 CET)
A peer-reviewed article of this Preprint also exists.
Ma, E.; Kabala, Z.J. Refereeing the Sport of Squash with a Machine Learning System. Mach. Learn. Knowl. Extr. 2024, 6, 506-553. Ma, E.; Kabala, Z.J. Refereeing the Sport of Squash with a Machine Learning System. Mach. Learn. Knowl. Extr. 2024, 6, 506-553.
Abstract
Squash is a sport where referee decisions are essential to the game. However, referee decisions in squash are very subjective in nature. Disputes, both from the players and the audience, regularly happen because the referee made a controversial call. In this study ,we proposed to automate the referee decision process through machine learning. We trained neural networks to predict squash referee decisions using data from 400 referee decisions acquired through extensive video footage reviewing and labeling. Six positional values were extracted, including the attacking player’s position, the retreating player’s position, the ball’s position in the frame, the ball’s projected first bounce, the ball’s projected second bounce, and the attacking player’s racket head position. We calculated nine additional distance values, such as the distance between players and the distance from the attacking player's racket head to the ball's path. Models were trained on Wolfram Mathematica and Python using these values. The best Wolfram Mathematica model achieved an 86% ± 3.03% accuracy, while the best Python model performed a 0.852 ± 0.051 accuracy (85.2% ± 5.1%). These accuracies surpass 85%, demonstrating near-human performances. Our model has great potential for improvement as it's currently trained with limited data (400 referee decisions) and lacks crucial data points such as time and speed. The performance of our model is almost surely going to improve significantly with a larger training data set. Unlike human referees, machine learning models follow a consistent standard, have unlimited attention spans, and make decisions instantly. If the accuracy is improved in the future, the model can potentially serve as an extra refereeing official for both professional and amateur squash matches. Both the analysis of referee decisions in squash and proposal to automate the process using machine learning is unique to this study.
Keywords
squash; refereeing; machine learning; neural network; sport; referee
Subject
Computer Science and Mathematics, Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning
Copyright: This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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