Results 261 to 270 of about 499,689 (285)
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Sensory conflict: perception of movement
2006Abstract Imagine you are sitting in a train. The train on the track beside you departs.Watching it move out your window, you have the illusion that your train is the one leaving. This illusion can also be felt on a bridge, looking at a river.
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Modeling sensory conflict and motion sickness in artificial gravity
Acta Astronautica, 2008Abstract It is necessary to characterize the vestibular response associated with head movements for various centrifuge rotation rates if one is to explore short-radius centrifugation as a viable form of artificial gravity for future spaceflights.
Paul Z. Elias +2 more
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Effect of Sensory Conflict and Postural Instability on Cybersickness
2019 IEEE Conference on Virtual Reality and 3D User Interfaces (VR), 2019Sensory conflict theory and postural instability theory were often tested individually to explain cybersickness in VR systems, but they were seldom systematically compared. An earlier study evaluated them on a large screen using 2D videos. This study evaluated sensory conflict and postural instability on the discomfort in VR.
Adrian K. T. Ng +2 more
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Sensory Conflict Theory and Space Sickness: Our Changing Perspective
Journal of Vestibular Research, 1998Motion sickness is a well-known nausea and vomiting syndrome whose physical signs include vomiting and retching, pallor, cold sweating, yawning, belching, flatulence, and decreased gastric tonus. Subjective symptoms include stomach discomfort, nausea, headache, feeling of warmth, and drowsiness.
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The role of sensory conflict on stair descent performance in humans
Experimental Brain Research, 1982Electromyographic (EMG) activity produced in the triceps surae (TS) and subsequent landing were examined under various visual conditions during stair descent with the following results: The amount of precontact TS EMG was reduced during each visual perturbation.
R L, Craik, B A, Cozzens, W, Freedman
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Motion sickness and perception: A reappraisal of the sensory conflict approach
British Journal of Psychology, 1992This review examines the role of activity and perceptual learning in motion sickness by means of a survey of the two kinds of recent research relevant to this topic. The first is a body of literature concerned not with motion sickness as such, but with perception of orientation and self‐motion under the conditions of ‘sensory conflict’ which are ...
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Orientation perception, motion sickness and vertigo: Beyond the sensory conflict approach
British Journal of Audiology, 1991Current theoretical issues central to the understanding of pathological disorientation (vertigo) are addressed through a critical review of research into perceptual disorientation in healthy subjects (motion sickness). Investigations inspired by the 'sensory conflict' model of orientation perception typically paid insufficient attention to higher-order
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Respiration and Blood Pressure in Sensory Motor Conflict
The Journal of General Psychology, 1946openaire +2 more sources
Modeling Sensory Conflict and Motion Sickness in A...
56th International Astronautical Congress of the International Astronautical Federation, the International Academy of Astronautics, and the International Institute of Space Law, 2005Paul Z. Elias +2 more
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The effects of sensory interaction and sensory conflict on consumer online review rating behavior
International Journal of Management Science and Engineering Management, 2023openaire +1 more source

