Some interesting personal observations...
1. When I do the dominant eye tests I appear right eye dominant, but I can influence the tests if I concentrate a little - like how you defocus to see a magic eye thing. I can make myself left eye dominant in the tests.
- I think this suggests my sighting is fairly balanced, and you'd think slightly right dominant, but..
2. When I am playing well/naturally I have the cue running slightly to the left of center. This is something I noticed on video I captured when I was playing well.
- So, am I actually left dominant? Or.. perhaps because my right eye is stronger I need to give the left a slightly better picture for the whole to be more accurate - this is an interesting angle/thought.
I strongly suggest that anyone who is concerned by eye dominance do the tests I mentioned here:
http://www.thesnookerforum.co.uk/boa...889#post719889
rather than trying to test for eye dominance directly. It doesn't matter which eye is dominant, it doesn't matter where the cue is positioned relative to the chin .. provided you're seeing what is actually there accurately.
1. When I do the dominant eye tests I appear right eye dominant, but I can influence the tests if I concentrate a little - like how you defocus to see a magic eye thing. I can make myself left eye dominant in the tests.
- I think this suggests my sighting is fairly balanced, and you'd think slightly right dominant, but..
2. When I am playing well/naturally I have the cue running slightly to the left of center. This is something I noticed on video I captured when I was playing well.
- So, am I actually left dominant? Or.. perhaps because my right eye is stronger I need to give the left a slightly better picture for the whole to be more accurate - this is an interesting angle/thought.
I strongly suggest that anyone who is concerned by eye dominance do the tests I mentioned here:
http://www.thesnookerforum.co.uk/boa...889#post719889
rather than trying to test for eye dominance directly. It doesn't matter which eye is dominant, it doesn't matter where the cue is positioned relative to the chin .. provided you're seeing what is actually there accurately.
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