Sports Vision Radio
A new systematic review and meta-analysis in Frontiers of Psychology pooled nine randomized controlled trials and 323 athletes to answer a deceptively simple question: what does stroboscopic visual training actually train? The headline is unambiguous — strobe training significantly shortens reaction time (moderate-to-large effect) but produces no significant improvement in decision-making ability. Dr. Laby maps these findings directly onto the Sports Vision Pyramid from Eye of the Champion: strobes are a powerful mid-pyramid stressor that degrades the visual signal and forces the brain to do more with less, earning legitimate reaction-time gains. But occlusion is not a decision tool — it doesn't teach an athlete to read a developing play, weigh options, and commit. That cognitive apex is exactly where the meta-analysis found nothing. The episode breaks down the precise dosing protocol, why the pyramid predicted this result, and how to use strobes correctly as one layer of a complete program rather than the whole program itself. EPISODE TIMESTAMPS: * [00:00] The Question — What Do Strobes Actually Train? * [00:27] The Headline — Reaction Time Yes, Decision-Making No * [00:44] The Protocol — Dosing That Works * [01:30] Why the Pyramid Predicted This * [01:52] Strobes as a Mid-Pyramid Stressor * [02:25] The One Exception — Experienced Athletes Only * [02:54] Strobe vs. Decision-Loading Training * [03:34] Near Transfer vs. Far Transfer * [03:56] How I Actually Use Strobes * [04:41] The Closing Lesson IN THIS EPISODE, YOU'LL LEARN: * Why strobe training significantly improves reaction time but not decision-making — and what that means for your program * The precise dosing protocol that works: 1–6 weeks, 1–2 sessions/week, ~10 minutes, low frequency (<10 Hz), low duty cycle (≤50%) * Why the Sports Vision Pyramid predicted this result before the data arrived * The one exception where decision-making improved — and why it's less impressive than it sounds * How strobe training (subtracting visual information) differs fundamentally from decision-loading training (adding cognitive demand under game conditions) * Why near transfer to reaction time doesn't guarantee far transfer to competition * How to position strobes correctly as one layer of a complete vision training program HELPFUL RESOURCES: * Sports Vision NYC [https://sportsvision.nyc/] * Connect with Dr. Laby on Instagram [https://instagram.com/sportsvisionnyc] * Pick Up a Copy of Eye of the Champion [https://training.sportsvision.nyc/eye-of-the-champion] * Download The Ultimate Sports Vision Guide for Athletes [FREE] [https://danlaby.mykajabi.com/guide] 👉 Don't forget to subscribe to Sports Vision Radio so you never miss an episode on the science of peak performance.
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