The Nikon D2-series bodies had a very wide-area AF system option that allowed Group Dynamic AF focusing, with or without closest subject priority, and with variable timing on Lock-On, to determine how long the AF system would stay locked on to its current target when "new" targets came into the viewfinder...it worked AMAZINGLY well.
By allowing the camera's AF system to analyze multiple data points, it can help in tracking rapidly-moving subjects/targets. Turning OFF all the AF points, except for the center point, limits the amount of data that the AF system has at its disposal. Using a wide-area AF system,with multiple AF points active and enabled, allows the AF system to compute the distance, and direction, of motion by using comparative analysis. Turning OFF all the AF points and relying on only the central AF point means that there is just ONE point being analyzed, and other additional information is not being considered. That can lead to problems when a subject's motion is fast, or erratic, or when the photographer wishes to use an off-center framing of the subject.
Nikon cameras have color-sensing sensors (between 420, 1,005, and 2,016 separate sensors) that measure subject COLOR, and correlate that to the AF area selected by the user when acquiring initial focus, and then use the color info (R-G-B data) to track targets that the user has initially selected. Canon is slowly developing its own system to do the same thing using an R-G-YG-B system in its high-end cameras, and the 7D and 60D.
There is a huge difference in the way Nikon and older Canons and other color-blind systems focus in group-AF modes, and even within brands, each specific focusing module has its own quirks.