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The Vestibular System and Human Dynamic Space OrientationThe motion sensors of the vestibular system are studied to determine their role in human dynamic space orientation and manual vehicle control. The investigation yielded control models for the sensors, descriptions of the subsystems for eye stabilization, and demonstrations of the effects of motion cues on closed loop manual control. Experiments on the abilities of subjects to perceive a variety of linear motions provided data on the dynamic characteristics of the otoliths, the linear motion sensors. Angular acceleration threshold measurements supplemented knowledge of the semicircular canals, the angular motion sensors. Mathematical models are presented to describe the known control characteristics of the vestibular sensors, relating subjective perception of motion to objective motion of a vehicle. The vestibular system, the neck rotation proprioceptors and the visual system form part of the control system which maintains the eye stationary relative to a target or a reference. The contribution of each of these systems was identified through experiments involving head and body rotations about a vertical axis. Compensatory eye movements in response to neck rotation were demonstrated and their dynamic characteristics described by a lag-lead model. The eye motions attributable to neck rotations and vestibular stimulation obey superposition when both systems are active. Human operator compensatory tracking is investigated in simple vehicle orientation control system with stable and unstable controlled elements. Control of vehicle orientation to a reference is simulated in three modes: visual, motion and combined. Motion cues sensed by the vestibular system through tactile sensation enable the operator to generate more lead compensation than in fixed base simulation with only visual input. The tracking performance of the human in an unstable control system near the limits of controllability is shown to depend heavily upon the rate information provided by the vestibular sensors.
Document ID
19670001428
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Contractor Report (CR)
Authors
Meiry, J. L.
(PH.D. THESIS)
Date Acquired
August 3, 2013
Publication Date
October 1, 1966
Subject Category
Aerospace Medicine
Report/Patent Number
NASA-CR-628
Report Number: NASA-CR-628
Accession Number
67N10751
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NSG-577
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
VESTIBULAR APPARATUS
HUMAN PERFORMANCE
SPACE ORIENTATION
MOTION PERCEPTION
MANUAL CONTROL
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