To the OP, we have used the photo targets at work in the past. Gunsite has these and similar targets in their simulators in the past, but as @
HCM notes, few people will or can access these resources. Scary situations, but I’d do my best to focus on the high chest throat area and moving as @
HCM suggested earlier, anticipating multiple controlled shots, maybe even closing for more precision-just speculating…
In a separate thread there was some discussion about USState Dept. quals; no movement there(should there be?). Off the top of my head, the only tests I know where there is shooter movement is on the US Marine MEU SOC qual and the Glock Operator Standards. There have been some earlier quals where one stepped sideways to a barricade or such, but not a lot of movement. So, moving shooters and targets is going to take some institutional effort, usually tax supported. There are practical competitions available to qualified citizens like IPSC/USPSA/IDPA that are helpful. Some private instructors like Hackathorn had drills involving movement. The one I took years ago we did a sort of box drill on several steel IPSC targets, forward sideways and backing up. Conversely, Farnam is of the opinion that if you move, move. You want to shoot, stop and deliver accurately. Pros and cons to each.
A thought is one could practice movement dry with a laser mounted to frame at home. I’ve done it with my TLR8s to see how movement affects weapon movement but I’m an admitted nerd…