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Artificial
Gravity: Head Movements During Short-radius Centrifugation
Laurence
R. Young, Heiko Hecht, Lisette E. Lyne, Kathleen H. Sienko,
Carol C. Cheung, Jessica Kavelaars
Man-Vehicle Lab
Massachusetts
Institute of Technology
(in
press Acta Astronautica)
Abstract
Short-radius
centrifugation is a potential countermeasure to long-term
weightlessness. Unfortunately, head movements in a rotating
environment induce serious discomfort, non-compensatory
vestibulo-ocular reflexes, and subjective illusions of body
tilt. In two experiments we investigated the effects of
pitch and yaw head movements in participants placed supine
on a rotating bed with their head at the center of rotation,
feet at the rim. The vast majority of participants experienced
motion sickness, inappropriate vertical nystagmus and illusory
tilt and roll as predicted by a semicircular canal model.
However, a small but significant number of the 28 participants
experienced tilt in the predicted plane but in the opposite
direction. Heart rate was elevated following one-second
duration head turns. Significant adaptation occurred following
a series of head turns in the light. Vertical nystagmus,
motion sickness and illusory tilt all decreased with adaptation.
Consequences for artificial gravity produced by short-radius
centrifuges as a countermeasure are discussed.
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