Saturday, February 28, 2009


A Visitor From Down Under

On February 16, we were honored to receive Pierre Elmurr, Sports Vision Director of Primary Eye Care in the Sydney, Australia area, who is the inventor of the SVT Eye-Hand training board. The SVT has been used all over the world as a tool to improve eye-hand coordination and speed, and Pierre has done the research to prove its validity. (That's Pierre in the middle, with Dr. B. on the left and Gary on the right in the photo.)

Pierre brought our board with him on a trip which included a visit with family in the Boston area, a meeting with Dr. Dan Laby, ophthalmologist for the Red Sox, and a run down to Fort Myers to gather some data with the board at spring training. We can't begin to say just how much we enjoyed meeting Pierre, and how much he was able to teach us in just a short visit. We only hope we can take him up on his invitation to visit his facility in Sydney sometime.

This board differs from our other board, the Wayne Saccadic Fixator, in several ways; first, it is driven from software residing in a laptop, rather than firmware in the board itself, so it is very easy to update and upgrade the software. It also records data in real time, displays it in onscreen, and can save it in a spreadsheet for further analysis. It uses lights and pusbuttons, much like other boards, but you only need to press within the circle to create a response, and you use your whole hand, unlike other boards which require pressing of a small area with only one or two fingers; so it more closely mimics actual sports performance.

At this point, Gary and I are still learning the various routines the SVT offers, and how to use them. But we are sure that this new board, which is also readily transportable, will become and essential component of our program of sports vision training. And once again, the best part of all was that we had the chance to meet and talk with Pierre.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Larry Fitzgerald and Vision Training

A friend sent me a link to an article on Arizona Cardinals receiver Larry Fitzgerald, who credits his success in no small part to some vision training he had done as a child, under the direction of his grandfather, optometrist Dr. Robert Johnson.

The article is located here. It speaks for itself, and even quotes Joan Vickers, PhD, of the University of Calgary and leading researcher in the area of the Quiet Eye, explaining how Fitzgerald uses his eyes to capture data that his brain decodes to help him catch a pass.

He made some amazing plays in this past Sunday's Super Bowl, though the Cardinals fell to the Steelers in the final minutes.