Motion Sickness Modeling with Visual Vertical Estimation and Its Application to Autonomous Personal Mobility Vehicles
Hailong Liu, Shota Inoue, Takahiro Wada

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel computational model that integrates visual vertical estimation with vestibular sensations to better predict motion sickness in autonomous vehicles, validated through static and driving experiments.
Contribution
It presents a 6 DoF SVC-VV model incorporating visual vertical data from images, a new approach for predicting motion sickness in autonomous driving scenarios.
Findings
Estimated visual vertical accurately matches gravitational direction
Model predicts increased motion sickness when visual and gravitational directions differ
Validation through static and driving experiments confirms model effectiveness
Abstract
Passengers (drivers) of level 3-5 autonomous personal mobility vehicles (APMV) and cars can perform non-driving tasks, such as reading books and smartphones, while driving. It has been pointed out that such activities may increase motion sickness. Many studies have been conducted to build countermeasures, of which various computational motion sickness models have been developed. Many of these are based on subjective vertical conflict (SVC) theory, which describes vertical changes in direction sensed by human sensory organs vs. those expected by the central nervous system. Such models are expected to be applied to autonomous driving scenarios. However, no current computational model can integrate visual vertical information with vestibular sensations. We proposed a 6 DoF SVC-VV model which add a visually perceived vertical block into a conventional six-degrees-of-freedom SVC model to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVisual perception and processing mechanisms · Vestibular and auditory disorders · Virtual Reality Applications and Impacts
