• SSTFOP
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    2 months ago

    The unusual factor at the Olympic level is that he both chose not to wear a blinder and not to close his eye. This means he was getting visual input from both eyes, that as you noted he had to block out mentally.

    When shooting is down to the millimeter, all of this is important. This is the exact opposite of practical shooting, where you want a large field of view, or potentially an occluded eye effect to aim in some cases. (Cover the front of a red dot and then aim with both eyes open for a test of occluded aiming. Your brain will overlay the dot from the shooting eye and the target from the weak side eye and you will be able to aim. It will not be down to the millimeter accurate however, which matters within the abstract environment of target shooting.)

    • @mindbleach
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      12 months ago

      This is also how you find your dominant eye. Do a thumbs-up, pick a distant thing, and move your thumb over the thing. Close your eyes one at a time. Whichever eye lines up is the one you should be shooting with.

      If it’s opposite your handedness, good luck using a rifle.