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Clinical Trial
. 1982 Jun;53(6):570-5.

The relationship of motion sickness susceptibility to learned autonomic control for symptom suppression

  • PMID: 7115241
Clinical Trial

The relationship of motion sickness susceptibility to learned autonomic control for symptom suppression

P S Cowings et al. Aviat Space Environ Med. 1982 Jun.

Abstract

Twenty-four men were randomly assigned to four equal groups matched in terms of their Coriolis Sickness Susceptibility Index (CSSI). Two groups of subjects were highly susceptible to motion sickness, and two groups were moderately susceptible. All subjects were given six CSSI tests at 5-d intervals. Treatment Groups I (highly susceptible) and II (moderately susceptible) were taught to control their autonomic responses, using a training method called autogenic-feedback training (AFT) before the third, fourth, and fifth CSSI tests. Control Groups III (highly susceptible) and IV (moderately susceptible) received no treatment. Results showed that both treatment groups significantly improved performance on CSSI tests after training; neither of the control groups changed significantly. Highly and moderately susceptible subjects in the two treatment groups improved at comparable rates. Highly susceptible control group subjects did not habituate across tests as readily as the moderately susceptible controls.

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