Performance
Lee Sidebottom
September 2, 2025
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Why Situational Awareness Matters

In fast-paced environments like sports, driving, or even everyday life, the ability to read the play and act decisively often makes the difference between success and failure. This ability is known as situational awareness — the skill of noticing critical details, interpreting what they mean, and anticipating what comes next.

For athletes, strong situational awareness can mean spotting an opponent’s move early. For pilots, it can mean staying alert to multiple cues under high stress. And for everyday people, it helps us navigate safely and make smarter choices.

What Is Situational Awareness?

Situational awareness demands for pilots

Situational awareness combines three core processes:

  • Perception – detecting key elements in the environment.
  • Comprehension – understanding what those elements mean.
  • Projection – anticipating what might happen next.

It’s not just about vision — it’s about attention, working memory, and decision-making under pressure.

Traditional Ways to Train Awareness

Coaches and trainers often use on-field drills to sharpen awareness, such as:

  • Scanning & head checks – teaching athletes to keep their head up and scan the field.
  • Small-sided games – increasing player density to force quicker reads.
  • Pattern recognition drills – exposing athletes to repeated tactical situations.

These are powerful methods, but they can be limited in how much they challenge the brain itself. However, these methods don’t directly strengthen the underlying cognitive systems that drive awareness, leaving an opportunity for more targeted approaches.

Cognitive Training for Situational Awareness

Modern science shows that awareness is built on underlying cognitive functions: sustained attention, divided attention, processing speed, and working memory. Training these functions directly can boost performance in ways traditional drills can’t.

Examples include:

  • Multi-object tracking exercises – training the brain to follow several moving targets at once.
  • Dual-task drills – combining decision-making with motor tasks to simulate pressure.
  • Perceptual load exercises – practicing focus in visually complex environments.

NeuroTracker as a Research-Backed Solution

Athlete training situational awareness with NeuroTracker 3D cognitive system

One of the most validated tools for situational awareness training is NeuroTracker, a 3D perceptual-cognitive system developed at the University of Montreal.

NeuroTracker challenges users to track multiple moving objects in a 3D space, while gradually increasing speed and complexity. This directly engages the attentional control and dynamic awareness skills that underpin situational awareness.

Beyond training, NeuroTracker also provides an objective scientific measure of these skills, allowing coaches and professionals to track progress over time. This dual role — as both a training tool and a benchmark — makes it uniquely valuable for building and monitoring situational awareness.

What makes it stand out further is the scientific validation: over 120 peer-reviewed studies have shown NeuroTracker can improve focus, decision-making speed, mental stamina, and cognitive resilience — all critical for situational awareness. It is used by elite athletes, military units, and clinicians worldwide.

Practical Tips for Coaches and Trainers

If you want to build situational awareness into your programs, try combining field drills with cognitive approaches:

  • Begin sessions with quick scanning drills to prime awareness.
  • Add small-sided games that force rapid perception-action cycles.
  • Integrate short bouts of NeuroTracker or other cognitive tools to challenge attentional skills under controlled conditions.
  • Encourage athletes to verbalize what they see — this improves comprehension and projection.

Takeaway

Situational awareness isn’t just a natural talent — it’s a trainable skill. By combining traditional drills with cognitive training systems like NeuroTracker, athletes and professionals can build the perception, attention, and decision-making abilities they need to excel under pressure.

Situational awareness can be trained — and when it is, performance, safety, and confidence all rise.



Lee Sidebottom also writes regularly on neuroscience and sports science on LinkedIn

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