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Orientation
illusions and heart-rate
changes during short-radius centrifugation
Heiko
Hecht, Jessica Kavelaars, Carol C. Cheung, Laurence R. Young
Man-Vehicle Lab
Massachusetts
Institute of Technology
(in
press Journal of Vestibular Research)
Abstract
Intermittent
short-radius centrifugation is a promising countermeasure
against the adverse effects of prolonged weightlessness.
To assess the feasibility of this countermeasure, we need
to understand the disturbing sensory effects that accompany
some movements carried out during rotation. We tested 20
subjects who executed yaw and pitch head movements while
rotating at constant angular velocity. They were supine
with their main body axis perpendicular to earth gravity.
The head was placed at the centrifuge’s axis of rotation.
Head movements produced a transient elevation of heart-rate.
All observers reported head-contingent sensations of body
tilt although their bodies remained supine. Mostly, the
subjective sensations conform to a model based on semicircular
canal responses to angular acceleration. However, some surprising
deviations from the model were found. Also, large inter-individual
differences in direction, magnitude, and quality of the
illusory body tilt were observed. The results have implications
for subject screening and prediction of subjective tolerance
for centrifugation.
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