Miscellaneous 2018

Extra-retinal and intersensory aspects of cybersickness

{Visually induced motion sickness (VIMS) is a common side-effect in virtual environments and simulators. We hold that sea sickness and cyber sickness are of the same origin. In both cases, the vestibular afferents and proprioceptive information disagree with the visual information about body posture and movement. If one modality (or more) is in conflict with the physical movement of our body, motion sickness ensues. We report a number of studies that we have conducted to investigate how repeated exposure, complexity of the visual stimulus, odors, and music influence the genesis of VIMS. Since the standard method to measure VIMS, via the Simulator Sickness Questionnaire, is rather time-consuming, it does not lend itself to taking the repeated measures necessary to portray the time-course of VIMS. We have validated a fast motion sickness scale (FMS) that is up to the job. Our results qualify and refine the conflict theory of motion sickness \textendash and may even challenge it. On the one hand, basic visual parameters, such as brightness and contrast, were rather inconsequential for the degree of VIMS. On the other hand, vection, stereopsis, and other extra-retinal factors, such as music and odors, had substantial influence on the genesis of VIMS.}

Author(s): Hecht, H and Keshavarz, B and Nooij, S
Book Title: TeaP 2018: Abstracts of the 60th Conference of Experimental Psychologists
Pages: 105
Year: 2018
Publisher: Pabst Science Publishers
Bibtex Type: Miscellaneous (misc)
Address: Lengerich, Germany
DOI: 10.23668/psycharchives.914
Electronic Archiving: grant_archive

BibTex

@misc{HechtKN2018,
  title = {{Extra-retinal and intersensory aspects of cybersickness}},
  booktitle = {{TeaP 2018: Abstracts of the 60th Conference of Experimental Psychologists}},
  abstract = {{Visually induced motion sickness (VIMS) is a common side-effect in virtual environments and simulators. We hold that sea sickness and cyber sickness are of the same origin. In both cases, the vestibular afferents and proprioceptive information disagree with the visual information about body posture and movement. If one modality (or more) is in conflict with the physical movement of our body, motion sickness ensues. We report a number of studies that we have conducted to investigate how repeated exposure, complexity of the visual stimulus, odors, and music influence the genesis of VIMS. Since the standard method to measure VIMS, via the Simulator Sickness Questionnaire, is rather time-consuming, it does not lend itself to taking the repeated measures necessary to portray the time-course of VIMS. We have validated a fast motion sickness scale (FMS) that is up to the job. Our results qualify and refine the conflict theory of motion sickness \textendash and may even challenge it. On the one hand, basic visual parameters, such as brightness and contrast, were rather inconsequential for the degree of VIMS. On the other hand, vection, stereopsis, and other extra-retinal factors, such as music and odors, had substantial influence on the genesis of VIMS.}},
  pages = {105},
  publisher = {Pabst Science Publishers},
  address = {Lengerich, Germany},
  year = {2018},
  slug = {hechtkn2018},
  author = {Hecht, H and Keshavarz, B and Nooij, S}
}