Yes but I don't see much value in that conclusion. Obviously, this is a diagnostic test only, nobody's gonna move their head to find the dot in any shooting situation. At the end you still need to learn to get target, dot, and eye in one plane and I am not sure what practical step comes out of that test's results. I've observed both instances, dot is close on but I don't see it right away, and dot is nowhere on and I don't see it. The former for me is invariably heeling the gun on very close targets, dot hides behind upper hoop, and is much rarer than just screwing up index to the side altogether. The solution is the same for both scenarios.