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Ground-based training for the stimulus rearrangement encountered during spaceflight
- Source :
- Acta oto-laryngologica. Supplementum. 460
- Publication Year :
- 1988
- Publisher :
- United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 1988.
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Abstract
- Approximately 65-70% of the crew members now experience motion sickness of some degree during the first 72 h of orbital flight on the Space Shuttle. Lack of congruence among signals from spatial orientation systems leads to sensory conflict, which appears to be the basic cause of space motion sickness. A project to develop training devices and procedures to preadapt astronauts to the stimulus rearrangements of microgravity is currently being pursued. The preflight adaptation trainers (PATs) are intended to: demonstrate sensory phenomena likely to be experienced in flight, allow astronauts to train preflight in an altered sensory environment, alter sensory-motor reflexes, and alleviate or shorten the duration of space motion sickness. Four part-task PATs are anticipated. The trainers are designed to evoke two adaptation processes, sensory compensation and sensory reinterpretation, which are necessary to maintain spatial orientation in a weightless environment. Recent investigations using one of the trainers indicate that self-motion perception of linear translation is enhanced when body tilt is combined with visual surround translation, and that a 270 degrees phase angle relationship between tilt and surround motion produces maximum translation perception.
- Subjects :
- Aerospace Medicine
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 03655237
- Volume :
- 460
- Database :
- NASA Technical Reports
- Journal :
- Acta oto-laryngologica. Supplementum
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsnas.20050000920
- Document Type :
- Report