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Resolving Sensory Conflict: the Effect of Muscle Vibration on Postural StabilityThe otolith-tilt reinterpretation hypothesis (OTTR) proposes that the central nervous system adapts to weightlessness by reinterpreting all otolith input as linear motion. While interpreting otolith input exclusively as linear motion is functionally useful in space, it is maladaptive upon return to Earth. Astronauts have reported experiencing illusory sensations during head movement which contributes to postural instability. The effect is assessed of muscle vibration in combination with a variety of sensory conflicts on postural equilibrium. The equilibrium of six healthy subjects was tested using the EquiTest sensory test protocol, with and without the confounding influence of triceps surea vibration. The data were analyzed with repeated measures with vibration, vision status, and platform status as independent variables. All main effects and an interaction between the presence of vision and platform sway referencing were found to be significant. Overall, a 4.5 pct. decrease in postural stability was observed with vibration. The trend of the difference scores between conditions with and without vibration suggests that vibration is most destabilizing when the triceps surea is able to change length during postural sway (i.e., conditions with a fixed support surface). The impact of sway referencing vision was virtually identical to that of eye closure, providing compelling evidence that sway referencing 'nulls out' useful cues about subject sway.
Document ID
19920012033
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Layne, Charles S.
(Kansas State Univ. Manhattan, KS, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
December 1, 1991
Publication Information
Publication: Texas A and M Univ., NASA(ASEE Summer Faculty Fellowship Program, 1991, Volume 1
Subject Category
Aerospace Medicine
Accession Number
92N21276
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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