ballcentric
Ballcentric is an adjective used to describe systems, analyses, or representations that treat the ball as the central reference object. The term is most often encountered in fields that track or model moving objects in three-dimensional space, such as sports analytics, computer vision, and robotics. Ballcentric approaches contrast with player-centric or field-centric methods by anchoring measurements, events, and dynamics to the ball's position and motion rather than to a particular player or fixed area.
In sports analytics, ballcentric analysis aligns events to the ball's trajectory, enabling assessment of passing sequences,
In robotics and computer vision, ballcentric representations use the ball as the origin of a coordinate frame
In physics simulations, ball-centric models focus on ball-ball and ball-environment interactions, with the ball's state driving
Advantages include a consistent temporal and spatial reference for events tied to the ball, making it easier
Origins and usage: The term is a descriptive compound rather than a formal technical standard; it is
See also: ball tracking, player-centric analysis, coordinate frame, calibration using spheres.