
Target Fixation
Involuntarily staring at an obstacle instead of the safe path — and riding straight into it.
What is it
Target fixation is when you spot a hazard — a barrier, tree, oncoming car — and can't look away. Your brain locks onto the threat, and your body subconsciously steers the motorcycle straight toward it. Where you look is where you go.
How it happens
In a corner, the rider sees a barrier or oncoming vehicle. Instead of looking at the corner exit, they stare at the threat. The body tenses, the hands lock the bars, counter-steering fails — the motorcycle goes exactly where the rider is looking.
How to reduce the risk
- Train your gaze shift — spot the hazard, then CONSCIOUSLY redirect your eyes to the safe path
- Turn your head — physical head rotation breaks the fixation
- Practice with cones — cone = «don't look,» gap = «look here»
- Remember: the motorcycle goes where you look. This is not a metaphor.
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Related terms
Perception Error
Misjudging speed, distance, or the intention of another road user. The number one cause of crashes.
Visibility Blocker
An object blocking your line of sight — a truck, fence, bush. Anything could be behind the blocker.
Blind Spot
An area around a vehicle where the driver cannot see you — not in mirrors, not in peripheral vision.
Left Turn Danger
A car turns left across your path — the most common type of motorcycle collision.
Car Door Opening
A driver or passenger opens a parked car door directly into a motorcyclist's path.
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Blind Spot
An area around a vehicle where the driver cannot see you — not in mirrors, not in peripheral vision.