4.6 Review

Moving in a Moving World: A Review on Vestibular Motion Sickness

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2016.00014

Keywords

motion sickness; vestibular; sensory conflict; cross-coupling stimulus; linear oscillations

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation, Bern, Switzerland
  2. Betty and David Koctscr Foundation for Brain Research, Zurich, Switzerland
  3. Center of Integrative Human Physiology, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
  4. Bonizzi-Theler-Foundation, Zurich, Switzerland
  5. Dr. Dabbous Foundation, Zurich, Switzerland

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Motion sickness is a common disturbance occurring in healthy people as a physiological response to exposure to motion stimuli that are unexpected on the basis of previous experience. The motion can be either real, and therefore perceived by the vestibular system, or illusory, as in the case of visual illusion. A multitude of studies has been performed in the last decades, substantiating different nauseogenic stimuli, studying their specific characteristics, proposing unifying theories, and testing possible counter-measures. Several reviews focused on one of these aspects; however, the link between specific nauseogenic stimuli and the unifying theories and models is often not clearly detailed. Readers unfamiliar with the topic, but studying a condition that may involve motion sickness, can therefore have difficulties to understand why a specific stimulus will induce motion sickness. So far, this general audience struggles to take advantage of the solid basis provided by existing theories and models. This review focuses on vestibular-only motion sickness, listing the relevant motion stimuli, clarifying the sensory signals involved, and framing them in the context of the current theories.

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