The effect of visual scene on motion sickness induced by lateral oscillation
The effect of visual scene on motion sickness induced by lateral oscillation
Exposure to travelling around corners in a car can cause motion sickness, with the variation in severity of sickness influenced by the visual scene (1). Cornering produces lateral oscillation which can trigger nausea (5). A few laboratory studies have investigated the influence of the visual scene on motion sickness caused by lateral oscillation (2,3); however, none have examined motion sickness experienced by subjects with normal and virtual viewing conditions. In the last decade, virtual reality technologies became a common approach that utilized in various applications within industry and education. Therefore, this study investigates the effect of the visual scene (including normal and virtual visual conditions) on motion sickness induced by low frequency lateral oscillation. It was hypothesized that a virtual visual condition using head mounted display (HMD) would result in less sickness relative to other visual conditions involving an internal view and no view (blindfolded).
Motion sickness, visual scene, Virtual Reality, Whole Body Vibration
Sumayli, Yahya, Mohammed
4eff0418-0d81-46e4-a4ff-3578fcd59d2c
Ye, Ying
5cfc9fff-c24f-4e7c-8a97-c78436d79966
23 June 2021
Sumayli, Yahya, Mohammed
4eff0418-0d81-46e4-a4ff-3578fcd59d2c
Ye, Ying
5cfc9fff-c24f-4e7c-8a97-c78436d79966
Sumayli, Yahya, Mohammed and Ye, Ying
(2021)
The effect of visual scene on motion sickness induced by lateral oscillation.
8th American Conference on Human Vibration, United States.
23 - 25 Jun 2021.
2 pp
.
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
Abstract
Exposure to travelling around corners in a car can cause motion sickness, with the variation in severity of sickness influenced by the visual scene (1). Cornering produces lateral oscillation which can trigger nausea (5). A few laboratory studies have investigated the influence of the visual scene on motion sickness caused by lateral oscillation (2,3); however, none have examined motion sickness experienced by subjects with normal and virtual viewing conditions. In the last decade, virtual reality technologies became a common approach that utilized in various applications within industry and education. Therefore, this study investigates the effect of the visual scene (including normal and virtual visual conditions) on motion sickness induced by low frequency lateral oscillation. It was hypothesized that a virtual visual condition using head mounted display (HMD) would result in less sickness relative to other visual conditions involving an internal view and no view (blindfolded).
Text
THE EFFECT OF VISUAL SCENE ON MOTION SICKNESS INDUCED BY LATERAL OSCILLATION
- Accepted Manuscript
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Published date: 23 June 2021
Venue - Dates:
8th American Conference on Human Vibration, United States, 2021-06-23 - 2021-06-25
Keywords:
Motion sickness, visual scene, Virtual Reality, Whole Body Vibration
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 455999
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/455999
PURE UUID: 01815da3-6b90-4777-b5dd-42914476674d
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Date deposited: 12 Apr 2022 16:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:57
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Contributors
Author:
Yahya, Mohammed Sumayli
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