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Optokinetic motion sickness - Attenuation of visually-induced apparent self-rotation by passive head movementsAn experimental study was conducted on seven normal subjects to evaluate the effectiveness of passive head movements in suppressing the optokinetically-induced illusory self-rotation. Visual simulation was provided by a servo-controlled optokinetic drum. Each subject participated in two experimental sessions. In one condition, the subject's head remained stationary while he gazed passively at a moving stripe pattern. In the other, he gazed passively and relaxed his neck muscles while his head was rotated from side to side. It appears that suppression of optokinetically-induced illusory self-rotation with passive head movements results from the operation of a spatial constancy mechanism interrelating visual, vestibular, and kinesthetic information on ongoing body orientation. The results support the view that optokinetic 'motion sickness' is related, at least in part, to an oculomotor disturbance rather than a visually triggered disturbance of specifically vestibular etiology.
Document ID
19790043545
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Teixeira, R. A.
(Brandeis University Waltham, Mass., United States)
Lackner, J. R.
(Brandeis University Waltham; MIT, Cambridge, Mass., United States)
Date Acquired
August 9, 2013
Publication Date
March 1, 1979
Subject Category
Aerospace Medicine
Accession Number
79A27558
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS9-15147
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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