Results 191 to 200 of about 2,931 (248)

Simulator sickness during driving simulation studies

Accident Analysis and Prevention, 2010
While driving simulators are a valuable tool for assessing multiple dimensions of driving performance under relatively safe conditions, researchers and practitioners must be prepared for participants that suffer from simulator sickness. This paper describes multiple theories of motion sickness and presents a method for assessing and reacting to ...
Johnell O Brooks   +2 more
exaly   +3 more sources

Simulator Sickness in an Army Simulator

Occupational Medicine, 1990
Simulator sickness describes a symptom reported by aircrew during or after flight simulator training. Some features are common to motion sickness but others, which are unusual during real flight, are believed to result specifically from the simulator environment.
M G, Braithwaite, B D, Braithwaite
openaire   +2 more sources

Vection and Simulator Sickness

Military Psychology, 1990
Simulator sickness has been identified as a form of motion sickness in which users of simulators exhibit symptoms characteristic of true motion sickness. In a fixed-base simulator, visual and vestibular sources of information specifying dynamic orientation are in conflict to the extent that the optical flow pattern viewed by the pilot creates a ...
L J, Hettinger   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Psychophysiological evaluation of simulator sickness evoked by a graphic simulator

Applied Ergonomics, 2004
The present study investigated the effects of simulator sickness, as an important bias factor on evaluation of emotional changes under the controlled condition of driving a car for 60 min at a constant speed (60 km/h) in a graphic simulator. Simulator sickness was measured and analyzed every 5 min using both subjective evaluation and physiological ...
Soon-Cheol Chung, Kazuyoshi Sakamoto
exaly   +3 more sources

Simulator Sickness Questionnaire: An Enhanced Method for Quantifying Simulator Sickness

The International Journal of Aviation Psychology, 1993
Simulator sickness (SS) in high-fidelity visual simulators is a byproduct of modem simulation technology. Although it involves symptoms similar to those of motion-induced sickness (MS), SS tends to be less severe, to be of lower incidence, and to originate from elements of visual display and visuo-vestibular interaction atypical of conditions that ...
Robert S. Kennedy   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

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