Can Passenger's Active Head Tilt Decrease The Severity of Carsickness? - Effect of Head Tilt on Severity of Motion Sickness in a Lateral Acceleration Environment
Takahiro Wada, Hiroyuki Konno, Satoru Fujisawa, Shunichi Doi

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that actively tilting the head against centrifugal force while riding in a car can significantly reduce the severity of motion sickness in lateral acceleration environments.
Contribution
It introduces a novel head-tilt strategy for passengers that effectively decreases carsickness, supported by experimental evidence.
Findings
Active head tilt increased the number of laps completed.
Subjective motion sickness ratings were lower with active head tilt.
Participants tolerated longer rides when using the head-tilt strategy.
Abstract
Objective: We investigated the effect of the passenger head-tilt strategy on the severity of carsickness in lateral acceleration situations in automobiles. Background: It is well known that the driver is generally less susceptible to carsickness than are the passengers. However, it is also known that the driver tilts his or her head toward the curve center when negotiating a curve, whereas the passenger's head moves in the opposite direction. Therefore, we hypothesized that the head-tilt strategy has the effect of reducing the severity of carsickness. Method: A passenger car was driven on a quasi-oval track with a pylon slalom while the participant sat in the navigator seat. The experiment was terminated when either the participant felt the initial symptoms of motion sickness or the car finished 20 laps. In the natural head-tilt condition, the participants were instructed to sit…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEffects of Vibration on Health · Ergonomics and Musculoskeletal Disorders · Winter Sports Injuries and Performance
