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Article type: Research Article
Authors: Bretl, Kathrine N.; * | Clark, Torin K.
Affiliations: University of Colorado Boulder, 3775 Discovery Drive, Boulder, CO, United States
Correspondence: [*] Corresponding author: Kathrine N. Bretl. Tel.: +1 303 492 4015; Fax: +1 303 492 8883; E-mail: kathrine.bretl@colorado.edu. ORCID: 0000-0001-7899-578X
Abstract: BACKGROUND:The cross-coupled (CC) illusion and associated motion sickness limit the tolerability of fast-spin-rate centrifugation for artificial gravity implementation. Humans acclimate to the CC illusion through repeated exposure; however, substantial inter-individual differences in acclimation exist, which remain poorly understood. To address this, we investigated several potential predictors of individual acclimation to the CC illusion. METHODS:Eleven subjects were exposed to the CC illusion for up to 50 25-minute acclimation sessions. The metric of acclimation rate was calculated as the slope of each subject’s linear increase in spin rate across sessions. As potential predictors of acclimation rate, we gathered age, gender, demographics, and activity history, and measured subjects’ vestibular perceptual thresholds in the yaw, pitch, and roll rotation axes. RESULTS:We found a significant, negative correlation (p = 0.025) between subjects’ acclimation rate and roll threshold, suggesting lower thresholds yielded faster acclimation. Additionally, a leave-one-out cross-validation analysis indicated that roll thresholds are predictive of acclimation rates. Correlations between acclimation and other measures were not found but were difficult to assess within our sample. CONCLUSIONS:The ability to predict individual differences in CC illusion acclimation rate using roll thresholds is critical to optimizing acclimation training, improving the feasibility of fast-rotation, short-radius centrifugation for artificial gravity.
Keywords: Human spaceflight, vestibular perceptual threshold, incremental acclimation, short-radius centrifugation, physiological countermeasure
DOI: 10.3233/VES-210019
Journal: Journal of Vestibular Research, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 305-316, 2022
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