Results 121 to 130 of about 388,786 (239)

The Effect of Vestibulo-Ocular Reflex Deficits and Covert Saccades on Dynamic Vision in Opioid-Induced Vestibular Dysfunction

open access: yesPLoS ONE, 2014
Patients with bilateral vestibular dysfunction cannot fully compensate passive head rotations with eye movements, and experience disturbing oscillopsia.
C. Ramaioli   +6 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Voluntary presetting of the vestibular ocular reflex permits gaze stabilization despite perturbation of fast head movements [PDF]

open access: yes
Normal subjects are able to change voluntarily and continuously their head-eye latency together with their compensatory eye movement gain. A continuous spectrum of intent-latency modes of the subject's coordinated gaze through verbal feedback could be ...
Zangemeister, Wolfgang H.
core   +1 more source

Curing a 96-year-old patient afflicted with benign paroxysmal positional vertigo on a motorized turntable

open access: yesClinical Interventions in Aging, 2014
Christopher J Bockisch,1–3 Dominik Straumann,1,4 Konrad P Weber1,2 1Department of Neurology, University Hospital Zurich, 2Department of Ophthalmology, University Hospital Zurich, 3Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, University
Bockisch CJ, Straumann D, Weber KP
doaj  

Role of orientation reference selection in motion sickness [PDF]

open access: yes
The overall objective of this proposal is to understand the relationship between human orientation control and motion sickness susceptibility. Three areas related to orientation control will be investigated.
Black, F. Owen, Peterka, Robert J.
core   +1 more source

The galvanically‐induced vestibulo‐ocular reflex in the cat [PDF]

open access: bronze, 1993
Ian S. Storper   +3 more
openalex   +1 more source

Human 3-D aVOR with and without otolith stimulation [PDF]

open access: yes, 2018
We describe in detail the frequency response of the human three-dimensional angular vestibulo-ocular response (3-D aVOR) over a frequency range of 0.05-1Hz. Gain and phase of the human aVOR were determined for passive head rotations in the dark, with the
Bockisch, Christopher   +2 more
core  

Torsional vestibulo-ocular reflex measurements for identifying otolith asymmetries possibly related to space motion sickness susceptibility [PDF]

open access: yes
Recent studies have identified significant correlations between space motion sickness susceptibility and measures of disconjugate torsional eye movements recorded during parabolic flights. These results support an earlier proposal which hypothesized that
Peterka, Robert J.
core   +1 more source

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