AI helps referees make better decisions when players do something that’s not supposed to happen, like catching the ball outside the field or running too far before hitting the ball.
Imagine you're playing a game of tag, and the rule is you can only touch the person if they're inside the playground. But someone runs all the way to the street before tagging you. That’s out-of-bounds, it doesn’t follow the rules. Now imagine there's a smart helper who watches everything closely and tells the referee when someone breaks the rules.
That smart helper is like AI in sports. It uses cameras and sensors to see exactly what happens, even if it’s hard for people to notice. For example, in soccer, if a player catches the ball outside the penalty area, the AI can point that out to the referee, just like your friend would tell you when someone breaks the tag rule.
How AI sees more than humans
AI doesn’t get tired or distracted. It's always watching and counting every second of the game. That means it can help referees make fairer calls, no need for guesswork!
Examples
- An AI helps a soccer referee see if the ball went out of bounds by watching the game from different angles.
- A basketball judge uses AI to tell if a player stepped out of bounds during a fast break.
- AI shows a tennis umpire where the ball landed, even when it's hard to see.
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See also
- How does AI influence search engines and present information overviews?
- How do AI deepfakes trick people so easily?
- How do AI language models generate text like humans?
- How do AI and ray tracing create hyper-realistic graphics in gaming?
- How do AI models create realistic video from text prompts?