42 All Time Classics

Actionloop

Brain Training

Big Brain Academy

Cooking Guide

Electroplankton

Maths Training

More Brain Training

Nintendogs

Picross DS

Sudoku Master

Sight Training

Animal Crossing

Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney

Elite Beat Agents

Harvest Moon DS

Hotel Dusk: Room 215

Magic Made Fun

Nintendo DS Browser

Nintendo MP3 Player

Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney

Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney: Justice for All

Professor Layton and the Curious Village

Puzzle League DS

Trauma Center: Under the Knife

 

Big Brain Academy for Wii

Endless Ocean

Wii Chess

Wii Fit

Wii Music

Wii Sports

Animal Crossing: Let's go to the City

Trauma Center: New Blood

Trauma Center: Second Opinion

Wii Play

 

INTERVIEW

Born in Shizuoka, Japan, Dr Hisao Ishigaki is a professor of the Faculty of Management and Information Sciences at the Aichi Institute of Technology.

After graduating from the Tokyo University of Education (now Tsukuba University), he was a research student in the medical department of Nagoya University from 1986 until he received his medical doctorate there in 1994.

Dr. Ishigaki is a leading specialist in the field of “Visual Training”, which is used regularly by different groups of individuals, including professional athletes.

The following is a translation of an interview that was conducted between the editorial staff of Nintendo of Japan's Nintendo Online Magazine and Dr Hisao Ishigaki.

 
We ask Dr Ishigaki about "Focus Ability"

What is this new term "Focus Ability", and what effects does training it have? We asked the supervisor of the game, Dr Ishigaki of the Aichi Institute of Technology.



Nintendo Online Magazine: Dr Ishigaki, please tell us about the kind of research you've been doing.

Ishigaki: "I study what is called 'Sports Vision'* at the university. Also called 'Sports Optometry', it's a field of study that researches the relationship between development in sports and 'Focus Ability'. One area of Sports Vision is the training of one's visual abilities, 'Visual Training'. Sight Training is a game that allows you to practise Visual Training using a DS."

*Sports Vision first emerged in the United States in 1978, when the American Optometric Association (a research body related to the study of the eye) founded a "Sports Vision Section" within the organisation. In 1988, the Sports Vision Research Society was founded in Japan with the same purpose.



NOM: What is this Focus Ability you've been telling us about? Is it something different from the generally well-known term "eyesight"?

Ishigaki: "I'm sure everyone has taken eye examinations during medical exams and the like in the past, but the ability those tests measure is much like the focus of a camera. In other words, it's a test to see how well you can focus accurately. The numbers used to represent how well you can focus, such as 1.0 or 0.7, are what is called 'visual acuity'. Eyesight is, in fact, the ability to discern small, stationary objects.

"However, you use many kinds of visual abilities in daily life. Identifying several objects in a wide range of vision at once, correctly recognising moving objects and so on make up your ability to see. In other words, you could say your visual ability is the accuracy and agility of your eyes. In this game we call your visual ability 'Focus Ability', and aim to improve it through training."


 
NOM: Could you tell us a bit more about Focus Ability?

Ishigaki: "When you use your eyes, many types of visual ability work at once. However, if you were to further divide them into five particular ability groups, they would appear as below. I'll explain them, along with the effects in daily life that you can expect from training your visual ability.

Dynamic Visual Acuity
"The ability to clearly see moving objects. It's an ability that greatly differs between individuals, and is related to things such as the ability to predict the speed and direction of a moving object and follow it with your eyes, and to make instant judgements with this information. Accurate play in sports like baseball, tennis and table tennis is a sign of good Dynamic Visual Acuity.


Momentary Vision
"The ability to process a lot of information at once. To take in all this information at once requires concentration, but rather than concentrating on a single object, accurately spreading your attention over a wide area is what is important here. This ability comes into play at times such as when you open a newspaper and instantly take in the rough details, for example.


Eye Movement
"The ability to swiftly move your eyes. Eye Movement is trained by moving the eyes quickly, or in large, dynamic movements, and is useful for Dynamic Visual Acuity and Peripheral Vision. For example, using a computer causes intensive Eye Movement, but if you train your Eye Movement it will help make your eyes tire less easily.


Peripheral Vision
"The ability to see objects in a wide range. When you focus on an object, your field of vision instantly narrows, but through training you can become able to still see objects in a wide range even while focusing on something. By broadening your Peripheral Vision, you could pay attention to your surroundings more easily while driving a car, and this could help you drive safely.


Hand-Eye Co-ordination
"The ability to process information quickly and respond accurately with your hands. It's similar to the body's widely-used reflexes, but one could say it is more advanced than that because it is a response made while processing complex visual information. You could expect that making your responses faster and more accurate may lead to an improvement in sports ability.


"However, as I stated previously, several kinds of the above visual abilities work at once when you use your eyes. Rather than focusing on individual elements, the most important thing is to train all your visual abilities. The comparison is often made, but your visual ability is just like your body’s strength. I think when you're asked 'are you strong?' what you're being asked about is your body's overall strength. However, within that you have elements such as stamina and muscle strength, and flexibility is important as well. I think what we call 'strength' is a combination of all these things. I'd like you to think of your general visual ability, Focus Ability, as 'eye strength'".


 
NOM: In what ways can you develop Focus Ability through training?

Ishigaki: "Rather than training the muscles that move your eyes (the ocular muscles), instead think of it as training your brain, which controls these muscles. It's like improving the precision and processing speed of computer software, so to speak. Incidentally, you probably know that people’s eyes tend to 'glaze over' as a result of drinking alcohol.  It gets harder to adjust the line of sight, to move the eyes. This is caused by the alcohol temporarily numbing the brain."



NOM: Is Focus Ability something that you normally train in your normal, day-to-day life?

Ishigaki: "I don't think it is something you can develop to high levels in the average lifestyle. Normally, as you develop and age, your abilities diminish. You can correct your eyesight with glasses, but that won't work for Focus Ability. However, you can train your Focus Ability by stimulating it. Unlike eyesight, which is hard to recover once it diminishes without resorting to corrective measures, I think anyone could improve their visual abilities through Focus Ability's trainability. Though the effects will differ depending on age, it should be beneficial to people of any age."


 
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Release Date

23.11.2007

Software Benefit

> Relaxation

> Exercise

> Focus