Using Galvanic Vestibular Stimulation to Induce Post-Roll Illusion in a Fixed-Base Flight Simulator.

IF 0.9 4区 医学 Q4 BIOPHYSICS
Mark M J Houben, Ivo V Stuldreher, Patrick A Forbes, Eric L Groen
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Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The illusions of head motion induced by galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS) can be used to compromise flight performance of pilots in fixed-base simulators. However, the stimuli used in the majority of studies fail to mimic disorientation in realistic flight because they are independent from the simulated aircraft motion. This study investigated the potential of bilateral-bipolar GVS coupled to aircraft roll in a fixed-base simulator to mimic vestibular spatial disorientation illusions, specifically the "post-roll illusion" observed during flight.METHODS: There were 14 nonpilot subjects exposed to roll stimuli in a flight simulator operating in a fixed-base mode. GVS was delivered via carbon rubber electrodes on the mastoid processes. The electrical stimulus was driven by the high-pass filtered aircraft roll rate to mimic the semicircular canals' physiological response. The post-roll test scenarios excluded outside visual cues or instruments and required subjects to actively maintain a constant bank angle after an abrupt stop following a passive prolonged roll maneuver. The anticipated outcome was an overshot in roll elicited by the GVS signal.RESULTS: The responses across subjects showed large variability, with less than a third aligning with the post-roll illusion. Subjective ratings suggest that the high-pass filtered GVS stimuli were mild and did not induce a clear sense of roll direction. However, uncontrolled head movements during stimulation might have obscured the intended effects of GVS-evoked illusory head movements.CONCLUSION: The mild and transient GVS stimuli used in this study, together with the uncontrolled head movements, did not convincingly mimic the post-roll illusion.Houben MMJ, Stuldreher IV, Forbes PA, Groen EL. Using galvanic vestibular stimulation to induce post-roll illusion in a fixed-base flight simulator. Aerosp Med Hum Perform. 2024; 95(2):84-92.

在固定基地飞行模拟器中使用 Galvanic Vestibular Stimulation(电晕前庭刺激)诱发 "后滚动幻觉"。
简介:电前庭刺激(GVS)诱发的头部运动错觉可用于影响固定基地模拟器中飞行员的飞行性能。然而,大多数研究中使用的刺激无法模拟真实飞行中的迷失,因为它们与模拟飞机运动无关。本研究调查了双侧双极 GVS 与固定基地模拟器中的飞机滚动相耦合以模拟前庭空间迷失幻觉的潜力,特别是在飞行过程中观察到的 "后滚动幻觉"。GVS 通过乳突上的碳橡胶电极传递。电刺激由高通滤波飞机翻滚率驱动,以模拟半规管的生理反应。滚转后测试场景不包括外部视觉提示或仪器,要求受试者在被动长时间滚转机动后突然停止,然后主动保持恒定的倾角。结果:受试者的反应差异很大,只有不到三分之一的受试者与后滚动假象一致。主观评价表明,高通滤波 GVS 刺激是温和的,不会引起明显的滚动方向感。结论:本研究中使用的温和瞬时 GVS 刺激以及不受控制的头部运动并没有令人信服地模拟出后滚错觉。在固定基地飞行模拟器中使用电前庭刺激诱发后滚错觉。Aerosp Med Hum Perform.2024; 95(2):84-92.
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来源期刊
Aerospace medicine and human performance
Aerospace medicine and human performance PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH -MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
22.20%
发文量
272
期刊介绍: The peer-reviewed monthly journal, Aerospace Medicine and Human Performance (AMHP), formerly Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine, provides contact with physicians, life scientists, bioengineers, and medical specialists working in both basic medical research and in its clinical applications. It is the most used and cited journal in its field. It is distributed to more than 80 nations.
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