Ares • Multiple Object Tracking (100 Levels)

Multiple Object Tracking

Track highlighted targets through 100 escalating levels. Watch the cue, follow every ball, then select the tracked targets when motion stops.

Targets left:
3

Select a level and choose Start to begin.

Visual Systems Engaged

Tracking multiple tagged balls forces rapid shifts between foveal detail when the cue appears and peripheral motion awareness once all targets start moving. The exercise strengthens smooth pursuit eye movements and the ability to guard several moving threats without losing central clarity.

Brain Networks Activated

Maintaining target identities taps the dorsal visual stream and posterior parietal cortex for spatial updating, while the prefrontal cortex and basal ganglia manage working memory and selection control. These systems cooperate to keep attention distributed yet precise under time pressure.

Sports Transfer

Multi-object tracking mirrors scenarios like defending a fast break, reading a soccer overlap, or scanning hockey passing lanes. Athletes who can follow several moving pieces while remembering which ones matter react faster, hold shape, and anticipate plays instead of chasing them.