In 9 point dynamic area mode the camera does not choose the initial focus point - You do. It will then maintain focus on your chosen part of the scene and will only mave to another point if the camera or subject move. So if you have chosen a focus point over an eye the camera will maintain focus on that eye unless it moves outside of the area covered by the 9 points.
From my experience, this isn't always the case: in 9-point dynamic the camera
can change the initial focus point if it detects stronger contrast under one of the surrounding focus points. This was a bit of a surprise to me, as I'd believed that it wouldn't do this.
I first noticed this when taking some portrait shots using the camera hand-held and in AF-C 9-point dynamic. I was getting some great focus locks with no issue, then I moved slightly and changed focal length. Focused again on the subject's eye, waited for it to confirm focus, then clicked away... And the eye I had my initially selected focus point over wasn't in focus. I put it down to simple Af error and tried again - same thing. After the third attempt, I pulled up the display on the LCD that shows where the focus point locked, and it had decided to move my chosen focus point to one of the outer ones, preferring the (apparently) stronger contrast of the subject's nose. I switched to single-point, and perfect focus was immediately achieved on the eye that I'd been keeping my chosen focus point over all along (subject was not moving around).
I've since done more controlled testing of this behaviour and it does choose the focus point for you in certain circumstances. You can test this yourself: set up the camera in AF-C 9-point and select a focus point (I'd chose the middle one to keep things simple by using the cross-point sensors); point it at a reasonably sized featureless area (say an interior wall) where the AF has no chance of getting a lock, and all nine points are well clear of any contrast. Keep the focus active (button down) and pan very slowly toward an area of contrast (a picture on the wall for example), keeping a close watch on when focus is achieved -
as soon as it is , stop and take a shot (don't keep panning). I'd advise using a tripod to help with controlling the panning smoothly and slowly, and then locking it as soon as you get focus so the camera doesn’t move and skew the results (but maybe you have great handheld panning technique!). Let's say the picture was to the left-hand side of the selected AF point and you slowly panned left toward it: you should find that the camera has switched from your chosen point to the one of the ones to the left of it; I used to expect that it wouldn't do that
initially - that it would wait until my chosen (middle) AF point found contrast, and
then move to another point if I subsequently moved the camera so that the selected AF point wasn't covering the subject. Hope you can see the distinction here – obviously all the dynamic modes can switch AF points depending on the situation, but I didn’t think they’d do so
before the initially chosen point had even got a lock.
9-point works just great most of the time, but I believe, mainly due to the behaviour I describe above, that it can sometimes be better to switch to single-point in certain situations where the 9-points cover a variety of potential 'targets', otherwise it might just choose a different area to focus on than you'd wanted. I also wonder if this is sometimes the cause of people's frustration when they don't get the results they expected. Of course, that's why we have so many choices when it comes to auto-focus: different tools for different tasks.
M