or post on it: Gunfighting and Neuroscience: Why Using Your Front Sight Might Kill You.
He's talking about looking at the front sight as you're raising it to face a threat instead of keeping your vision on the threat. Take a look if you have time, see what you think.
2 comments:
I don't know anything about "quiet eye" but I was taught a traditional sight picture. Through learning "muscle memory" to establish the sight picture one day I transitioned focus from the sights to always focusing on the target. This happened naturally during competition. Now it is completely unnatural for me to look at the sight picture unless it is in my peripheral. I also established much faster competition times and accuracy as well. Another side effect is my weak hand accuracy is almost as good as my strong hand.
Calling BS on this one. You have to start by using the sights in order to make it part of muscle memory. These SWAT officers are not hip shooting, the gun is up in its' proper position. They are probably taking a "flash" sight picture or using the profile of the gun to sight in.
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