The findings come amidst renewed debate on whether neutral umpiring is still required in Test matches following the introduction of the Decision Review System (DRS), researchers said.
Dr Abhinav Sacheti and Professor David Paton from Nottingham University Business School and Dr Ian Gregory-Smith from the University of Sheffield analysed LBW decisions in exactly 1,000 Test matches that took place between 1986 and 2012 - nearly half of Test matches ever played in the history of cricket.
Researchers found clear evidence of fewer decisions in favour of home teams with neutral umpires.
"Our results suggest that when two home umpires officiated in Test matches, away teams were likely to suffer on average 16 per cent more LBW decisions than home teams. When the ICC introduced the one neutral umpire policy, this advantage to home teams receded to 10 per cent," Sacheti, lead author of the study, said.
The researchers found that the bias by home umpires in favour of home teams had been particularly strong in Test matches played in Australia, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.
A possible explanation for the finding is that home umpires were unduly influenced by pressure from local crowds and, indeed, a similar bias towards home teams has been noted amongst football referees, researchers said.
"The results do not necessarily mean that umpires deliberately favoured their home teams - the bias may have been unconscious. The fact remains though that introducing neutral umpires seemed to get rid of the problem," Paton said.
Recently, some commentators have suggested that the introduction of the DRS eliminates the need for neutral umpires, said researchers.
The study was published in the Journal of the Royal Statistical Society.
