Logo image
Home Academic units
Sign in
Asymmetric otolith function and increased susceptibility to motion sickness during exposure to variations in gravitoinertial acceleration level
Journal article

Asymmetric otolith function and increased susceptibility to motion sickness during exposure to variations in gravitoinertial acceleration level

J R Lackner, A Graybiel, W H Johnson and K E Money
Aviation, space, and environmental medicine, Vol.58(7), pp.652-657
07/1987
PMID: 3619840

Abstract

Gravitation Saccule and Utricle - physiopathology Eye Movements Humans Motion Sickness - physiopathology Otolithic Membrane - physiopathology Weightlessness Acceleration

Metrics

33 Record Views

Details