In normal
binocular vision there is an effect of
parallax, and therefore the dominant eye is the one that is primarily relied on for precise positional information. This may be extremely important in sports which require aim, such as
archery,
darts or
shooting sports. In a 1998 study of professional baseball players, hand–ocular dominance patterns did not show an effect on
batting average or
ERA. Similarly, in 2005, a South African study found that "
cricketers were not more likely to have crossed dominance" than the normal population. Ocular dominance is an important consideration in predicting patient satisfaction with
monovision correction in
cataract surgery refractive surgery, also laser eye surgery, and
contact lens wear. The dominant eye has more neural connections to the brain than the other eye does. According to a sixty-person study in the
Proceedings of the Royal Society B, in non-dyslexic people, the blue cone-free spot in the dominant eye tends to be round and the same spot in the non-dominant eye tends to be unevenly shaped; in
dyslexic people both eyes tend to have round areas. The study suggests this difference may be a potential, and possibly treatable, cause of dyslexia; however, further tests are required to confirm this. At least 700 million people worldwide have dyslexia. In response to the study, John Stein of the
University of Oxford cautions that while the study is "really interesting", there is no one single cause of dyslexia. It has also been shown that ocular dominance can influence the performance of tasks that require the activation of
executive functions, in particular, when performing the
Stroop test. Moreover, it has been found that in people with different ocular dominance, areas of the
visual cortex are activated differently in such tasks. ==Determination==