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Artificial horizon effects on motion sickness and performance. | LitMetric

Artificial horizon effects on motion sickness and performance.

Otol Neurotol

The Motion Sickness and Human Performance Laboratory, The Israel Naval Medical Institute, Haifa, Israel.

Published: July 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to determine if projecting Earth-referenced visuals during simulated motion could reduce motion sickness and improve performance.
  • Thirty participants prone to motion sickness were tested in a motion simulator, experiencing visual scenes while undergoing various performance assessments over a 120-minute period.
  • Results showed a reduction in motion sickness severity but no improvement in cognitive or motor skills, suggesting that while visual aids may help with discomfort, they do not enhance performance for those actively operating vessels.

Article Abstract

Hypothesis: To investigate whether the projection of Earth-referenced scenes during provocative motion can alleviate motion sickness severity and prevent motion sickness-induced degradation of performance.

Background: Exposure to unfamiliar motion patterns commonly results in motion sickness and decreased performance.

Methods: Thirty subjects with moderate-to-severe motion sickness susceptibility were exposed to the recorded motion profile of a missile boat under moderate sea conditions in a 3-degrees-of-freedom ship motion simulator. During a 120-minute simulated voyage, the study participants were repeatedly put through a performance test battery and completed a motion sickness susceptibility questionnaire, while self-referenced and Earth-referenced visual scenes were projected inside the closed simulator cabin.

Results: A significant decrease was found in the maximal motion sickness severity score, from 9.83 ± 9.77 (mean ± standard deviation) to 7.23 ± 7.14 (p < 0.03), when the visual display better approximated the full scale of the roll, pitch, and heave movements of the simulator. Although there was a significant decrease in sickness severity, substantial symptoms still persisted. Decision making, vision, concentration, memory, simple reasoning, and psychomotor skills all deteriorated under the motion conditions. However, no significant differences between the projection conditions could be found in the scores of any of the performance tests.

Conclusion: Visual information regarding the vessel's movement provided by an artificial horizon device might decrease motion sickness symptoms. However, although this device might be suitable for passive transportation, the continued deterioration in performance measures indicates that it provides no significant advantage for personnel engaged in the active operation of modern vessels.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MAO.0b013e318255ddabDOI Listing

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