Professional basketball player, Jerome Meyinsse, uses eye tracker during shooting practice to self-analyze his techniques. During his first session, he noticed that his gaze was constantly drifting to the left of the rim when shooting. As a result, some of his balls were hitting the left side of the rim. In Basketball, how a shooter visualizes the target, how consistent their visual fixation is, and how long they maintain that fixation has been correlated to shooting success.
William Rahm — goalie coach for one of the Swedish men's elite ice-hockey teams (HV 71) — uses eye tracking technology to gather coginitive information from his players. Rahm knows that the skills needed to be a proficient goalie include puck tracking and reading the game. He used our eye tracking glasses to overcome one of his specific issues — one that most coaches face, irrespective of sport — and that is watching the action from the sidelines. Our technology enabled Rahm to get inside the goalie's head while on the ice, providing the data to visualize the cognitive processes at play and translate subconscious actions into effective new training strategies.
Trained ophthalmologist and sport vision expert, Dr. Daniel Laby, uses eye tracking technology to analyze quiet eye to help athletes improve performance. Dr. Laby often uses our wearable eye tracking glasses to observe visual acuity and “quiet eye” focus, directly linking visual data to real-time athletic decision-making and execution. This scientific, evidence-based approach empowers batters (view video) to translate vision findings into measurable on-field result
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