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Fox R A - - 1990
The relationship between vomiting and conditioned taste aversion was studied in intact cats and squirrel monkeys and in cats and squirrel monkeys in which the area postrema was ablated by thermal cautery. In cats conditioned 7-12 months after ablation of the area postrema, three successive treatments with xylazine failed to ...
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Kaji T - - 1990
Effects of various types of motion stimuli were compared to investigate optimum method to elicit motion sickness and adaptation in Suncus murinus (suncus). Three different direction of shaking in the horizontal plane, back and forth, right and left and revolving, induced emetic response to the similar extent. However, vertical shaking ...
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Yardley L - - 1990
Movement of large portions of the visual field can induce a static observer to experience illusory self-motion, changes in perceived orientation and motion sickness. Two experiments were performed to determine whether susceptibility to motion sickness might be related to an inability to ignore misleading visual information for orientation, measured here ...
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Kaplan J M - - 1989
In order to identify fixed versus flexible aspects of swallowing and oromotor control, we developed a method for the concurrent analysis of swallow frequency, swallow volume, and the temporal correlation between swallowing and rhythmic orolingual movements during prolonged bouts of fluid ingestion in unanesthetized, unrestrained rats. Rats actively ingested 0.1 ...
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Bechtel R B - - 1989
A perennial problem with theorizing is the improper context which experiments and correlational studies assume without understanding first the environmental levels of correspondence at which variables operate in nature. Ecological studies show variables can operate within separate contexts in such a way as to cancel the influence if too large ...
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Takeda N - - 1989
Three kinds of neurotransmitters (histamine, acetylcholine, and catecholamine) are thought to be important in the neural processes of motion sickness because antihistaminics, scopolamine, and amphetamine are effective in preventing motion sickness. In this study, we examined the neurochemical and neuropharmacologic features of motion sickness in rats. Based on our results, ...
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Holtmann S - - 1989
A controlled, double-blind study was carried out to determine whether nystagmus response to optokinetic or vestibular stimuli might be altered by some agent contained in powdered ginger root (Zingiber officinale). For comparative purposes, the test subjects were examined after medication with ginger root, placebo and with dimenhydrinate. Eye movements were ...
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Sivak M - - 1989
This study investigated the effects of prior headlighting experience on ratings of discomfort glare from headlamps in an actual driving situation. Specifically, discomfort glare ratings given by West Germans who had recently arrived in the United States and were, presumably, used to the relatively low levels of glare associated with ...
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Rolnick A - - 1989
It is generally agreed that the incidence of motion sickness in sailors working below deck is higher than in sailors who have the horizon as a visual reference on the bridge. This study investigated the possible beneficial effect of a projected artificial horizon as a means to prevent seasickness. Twelve ...
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Dobie T G - - 1989
This experiment was undertaken to assess the degree of stimulus generalization in visually-induced motion sickness. Sixteen subjects participated in six sessions in which they were exposed to a rotating field of vertical stripes for five 4-min trials. This stimulus elicited the perception of self-vection. In the first three sessions, the ...
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Thornton W E - - 1989
Changes in the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) during space flight have been suspected of contributing to space motion sickness. The horizontal VOR was studied in nine subjects on two space shuttle missions. Active unpaced head oscillation at 0.3 Hz was used as the stimulus to examine the gain and phase of ...
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Lucot J B - - 1989
Vomiting was suppressed in cats pretreated with 8-OH-DPAT and then challenged with an emetic stimulus; motion, xylazine or cisplatin. The antiemetic effect is likely due to stimulation of postsynaptic serotonin-1A receptors. The most parsimonious explanation is that it acts at a convergent structure, presumably at or near the vomiting center. ...
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Williams S L - - 1989
Investigated the extent and mechanisms of therapeutic generalization across distinct areas of agoraphobic dysfunction. Twenty-seven severe agoraphobics were each given performance-based treatment for some phobic areas while leaving their other phobias untreated. Behavioral tests revealed that (a) the treated phobias improved significantly more than the untreated (transfer) phobias, (b) the ...
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Lackner J R - - 1989
Mechanical unloading during head movements in weightlessness may be an etiological factor in space-motion sickness. We simulated altered head loading on Earth without affecting vestibular stimulation by having subjects wear a weighted helmet. Eight subjects were exposed to constant velocity rotation about a vertical axis with direction reversals every 60 ...
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Stern R M - - 1989
The visual-vestibular-proprioceptive sensory mismatch of vection provokes motion sickness in approximately 60% of healthy subjects. Approximately 60% of astronauts experience motion sickness in microgravity where vestibular/otolith function is altered. The purpose of this study was to determine the extent to which symptoms of motion sickness and tachygastria, an abnormal 4-9 ...
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Hu S - - 1989
Motion sickness symptoms and electrogastrograms (EGGs) were obtained from 60 healthy subjects while they viewed an optokinetic drum rotated at one of four speeds: 15, 30, 60 or 90 degrees.s-1. All subjects experienced vection, illusory self-motion. Motion sickness symptoms increased as drum speed increased up to 60 degrees.s-1; i.e., symptoms ...
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Igarashi M - - 1989
Procedures designed to evaluate the severity of motion sickness have included subjective reporting of changes in salivation. In order to increase objectivity, we studied the sodium concentration of saliva, which is directly related to the flow rate. Healthy adults with normal vestibular function underwent a modified Coriolis Sickness Susceptibility Index ...
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Stewart J J - - 1989
Seven human volunteers were subjected to stressful Coriolis stimulation (rotating chair) either during the fasted state or following the ingestion of yogurt (6 oz). Subjects tested after yogurt reached a Malaise-III (M-III) endpoint of motion sickness after significantly (p less than 0.01) fewer head movements than subjects tested in the ...
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French C C - - 1989
Hypotheses derived from right shift theory concerning the relationship between laterality and mathematical ability were investigated. This was done by dividing a group of 129 subjects into subgroups with presumably different distributions of the rs+ +, rs+ - and rs- - genotypes on the basis of their manual skills and ...
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Reccia R - - 1989
We analyzed quantitatively electronystagmographic recordings of pendular waveforms via spectral analysis methods. We found (1) symmetrical pendular oscillations in orbital positions spanning a range as wide as 40 degrees, with frequencies between 2 and 8 Hz; (2) stable and small pendular oscillations in patients without a null zone and unstable ...
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Arwas S - - 1989
The purpose of the experiment was to demonstrate conditioned taste aversion (CTA) and latent inhibition (LI) of CTA in humans using rotation-induced motion sickness as the unconditioned stimulus. To accomplish this, flavour familiarity (familiar vs unfamiliar) and rotation (rotation vs no rotation) were manipulated in a 2 X 2 factorial ...
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Harry N A - - 1989
Space Sled is a device for providing controlled linear acceleration stimuli in the microgravity environment of orbital flight. The scientific objectives of the experiments which used Space Sled on the D-1 Spacelab mission were to study aspects of otolith organ (that is, that part of the inner ear which transduces ...
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Pingree B J - - 1989
This review describes current concepts concerning the aetiology and nature of seasickness. The condition is a manifestation of the more general phenomenon of motion sickness. It may be understood by reference to a neural mismatch hypothesis and details of the nature of the provocative motion are described. Drug treatment of ...
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Lucot J B - - 1989
Six female cats, varying in susceptibility to motion sickness, were implanted with chronic cannulae in the rostral portion of the fourth ventricle. The cats were then challenged with a motion sickness-inducing stimulus. Samples of cerebrospinal fluid were withdrawn before and after emesis or 30 min of motion if emesis did ...
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Leimann Patt H O - - 1988
The assessment of motion sickness susceptibility is still an unsolved problem, due in part to its unclear etiology. We studied 16 referred patients suffering from "idiopathic motion sickness" and 4 pilots suffering from motion airsickness. All clinical and neurological tests proved negative, including electroencephalograms, electronystagmograms, Doppler studies, and computerized tomography ...
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Fox R A - - 1988
The role of the vagus nerve in motion-induced conditioned taste aversion (CTA) was studied in hooded rats. Animals with complete, selective gastric vagotomy failed to form conditioned taste aversion after multiple conditioning sessions in which the conditioned stimulus (a cider vinegar solution) was drunk immediately before a 30-min exposure to ...
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Fox S - - 1988
Ninety-four Israeli pilot trainees completed a battery of anxiety related questionnaires: Taylor Manifest Anxiety Scale, EPQ, 16PF, and Spielberger's State and Trait Anxiety Scores. Self reports and flight instructor observations of motion sickness symptoms were collected after initial flights. No significant correlations were found between these two sources. Anxiety scores ...
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Leventhal H - - 1988
Susceptibility to motion sickness has been demonstrated to be a predictor of anticipatory nausea in cancer patients receiving chemotherapy. However, previous research did not test whether motion sickness increases anticipatory nausea only by increasing the base rate of posttreatment nausea and vomiting (which has traditionally served as the unconditioned stimulus ...
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Gordon C R - - 1988
The effect of experimental motion sickness condition (rotation) on salivary flow and composition was studied in 34 healthy male volunteers. In most subjects, the flow rate of whole saliva was significantly decreased, while the potassium concentration was markedly increased during rotation. These results contrast with the classic reports of subjectively ...
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Grigoriev A I - - 1988
This paper reviews existing hypotheses concerning the mechanisms of adaptation of the vestibular apparatus and related somatosensory systems to microgravity with reference to the flight data. Having in view theoretical concepts and experimental data accumulated in space flights, a conceptual model of the development of a funtional system responsible for ...
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Rosendorff C - - 1988
Urapidil is an alpha 1-adrenoceptor antagonist which also has a central antihypertensive effect, the mechanism of which has yet to be conclusively defined. A number of open and comparative studies have produced evidence for the efficacy and safety of urapidil. A study recently completed by the author produced a dose-dependent ...
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Lichtenberg B K - - 1988
This paper will describe the biomedical support aspects of humans in space with respect to the vestibular system. The vestibular system is thought to be the primary sensory system involved in the short-term effects of space motion sickness although there is increasing evidence that many factors play a role in ...
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Reschke M F - - 1988
Approximately 65-70% of the crew members now experience motion sickness of some degree during the first 72 h of orbital flight on the Space Shuttle. Lack of congruence among signals from spatial orientation systems leads to sensory conflict, which appears to be the basic cause of space motion sickness. A ...
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Vizek M - - 1987
There is considerable interindividual variation in ventilatory response to hypoxia in humans but the mechanism remains unknown. To examine the potential contribution of variable peripheral chemorecptor function to variation in hypoxic ventilatory response (HVR), we compared the peripheral chemoreceptor and ventilatory response to hypoxia in 51 anesthetized cats. We found ...
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Kohl R L - - 1987
The neural mismatch theory of space motion sickness asserts that the central and peripheral autonomic sequelae of discordant sensory input arise from central integrative processes falling to reconcile patterns of incoming sensory information with existing memory. Stated differently, perceived novelty reaches a stress level as integrative mechanisms fail to return ...
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Lessard C S - - 1987
Space motion sickness was not reported during the first Apollo missions; however, since Apollo 8 through the current Shuttle and Skylab missions, approximately 50% of the crewmembers have experienced instances of space motion sickness. One of NASA's efforts to resolve the space adaptation syndrome is to model the vestibular response ...
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Wilpizeski C R - - 1987
Nonrestrained adult squirrel monkeys were found to be prolific vomiters when rotated in the horizontal plane for at least 1 h with visual cues available. When multiple daily spins were given, monkeys who vomited early during the first session tended to habituate during subsequent rotations. Subjects who vomited late during ...
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Thornton W E - - 1987
An inflight, clinically-oriented investigation of SMS was begun on STS-4 and revealed the following: compared to motion sickness on Earth, autonomic signs are significantly different in space motion sickness (SMS) vs. motion sickness (MS) in that sweating is not present, pallor or flushing may be present, and vomiting is episodic, ...
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Lackner J R - - 1987
Astronauts report that head movements in flight tend to bring on symptoms of space motion sickness (SMS). We evaluated how head movements in pitch, yaw, and roll--made both with normal vision and eyes-occluded--affect susceptibility to motion sickness in the zero G phase of parabolic flight maneuvers. The findings are clearcut: ...
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Parker D E - - 1987
A program has been initiated to develop apparatus and procedures to preadapt astronauts to the sensory rearrangement associated with weightlessness in spaceflight. If space motion sickness is a consequence of adaptation to that sensory rearrangement, preflight training could afford astronauts significant relief from the motion sickness. The preflight adaptation trainer ...
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Lawther A - - 1987
A method is proposed by which the incidence of motion sickness may be predicted from measurement of the motion exposure. The method is based on data from both field and laboratory studies involving large numbers of people and is applicable to marine and other environments where vertical oscillation occurs at ...
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Thornton W E - - 1987
Gastrointestinal (Gl) symptoms in space motion sickness (SMS) are significantly different from those in ordinary motion sickness (MS). Vomiting is sudden, often unexpected, infrequent, never prolonged and usually without nausea. Inflight bowel sounds are absent in those with SMS but present after recovery and in those not affected. Recording and ...
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Lackner J R - - 1987
Von Baumgarten and his colleagues (23,24) have suggested that asymmetries in otolith function between the left and right labyrinths may result from differences in otoconial mass and could play a role in space motion sickness. Such asymmetries would be centrally compensated for under terrestrial conditions but on exposure to weightlessness ...
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Warwick-Evans L A - - 1987
Sweating in the absence of thermal stimulation is one of the cardinal symptoms of motion sickness. But since sweating is closely related to electrodermal activity this may be a potentially useful index of the intensity of motion sickness. In order to evaluate this possibility, the correlations between electrodermal activity and ...
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Marlett J A - - 1987
Our short-term study used objective and subjective criteria to evaluate the ability of two laxative preparations to relieve constipation. Forty-two adults who were constipated, i.e., had less than or equal to 3 bowel movements during 1 wk of a single-blind placebo treatment, were randomized to receive psyllium (7.2 g/day) or ...
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Birtchnell J - - 1987
A system of describing attitudes towards others and ways of relating to others is presented. The system is constructed around two dimensions, the one concerned with closeness vs. separateness, the other concerned with dominance vs. submissiveness. Each dimension has two extreme positions and each of these incorporates a range of ...
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Cabanac M - - 1987
A matrix of 25 gustatory stimuli combined five sucrose concentrations (0.15 to 2.35 mole/l) with five temperatures (10 to 50 degrees C) or sournesses (pH 1.8 to 5.7). On four different days at the same time of day ten healthy young men served as subjects. Sweet pleasure/displeasure vs. temperature pleasure/displeasure ...
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Miller S M - - 1987
Subjects were divided into information seekers (high monitors)/information avoiders (low monitors) and distractors (high blunters)/nondistractors (low blunters) on the basis of their scores on a self-report scale to measure coping styles, the Miller Behavioral Style Scale (MBSS). In Experiment 1, subjects were faced with a physically aversive event (the prospect ...
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Oman C M - - 1987
Recent research results from ground and flight experiments on motion sickness and space sickness conducted by the Man Vehicle Laboratory are reviewed. New tools developed include a mathematical model for motion sickness, a method for quantitative measurements of skin pallor and blush in ambulatory subjects, and a magnitude estimation technique ...
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Wilpizeski C R - - 1987
Nonrestrained squirrel monkeys were rotated repeatedly in the horizontal plane once per day for preset times or until a vomiting response occurred. Emesis latencies and frequencies were recorded. Some subjects were fed fresh banana immediately before and after each rotation. The amount consumed provided a measure of conditioned food aversion ...
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