几十年的实际驾驶经验对虚拟乘客晕车前姿势前兆的影响

Chih-Hui Chang, T. Stoffregen, Man Kit Lei, K. Cheng, Chung-Chieh Li
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摘要

先前的研究表明,与虚拟车辆相关的晕动症在乘客中比在驾驶员中更为常见。另外,其他研究也表明,虚拟驾驶过程中晕车的姿势前兆因先前驾驶实体车辆的经验而异。我们研究了这些先前影响的交叉点:我们询问几十年的实际驾驶经验是否会:1)影响虚拟车辆中乘客的晕动病;2)影响虚拟车辆中乘客的晕动病姿势前兆。在我们的研究中,中年人作为乘客被置于虚拟车辆中。一些参与者(物理驾驶者)有几十年驾驶物理汽车的经验,而另一些参与者(物理非驾驶者)则很少或从未驾驶过物理汽车。首先,我们测量了站立的参与者在执行简单视觉任务时头部和躯干的运动。然后,每位参与者都观看了一段虚拟车辆的运动记录,有些参与者会因此产生晕动症。之后,晕动病的发生率和严重程度在体能驾驶者和体能非驾驶者之间均无差异。我们对暴露前站立身体摇摆的分析表明,在测量运动的空间幅度和时间动态时,存在晕动病的姿势前兆。在具有统计学意义的交互作用中,这些前兆("好 "与 "晕")与实际驾驶经验(实际驾驶者与非实际驾驶者)之间存在差异。总之,我们的研究结果表明,在虚拟乘客中,长期的真实世界驾驶经验会影响晕动病的姿势前兆,但不会影响晕动病的发生率或严重程度。我们将从晕动病病因理论中感知和运动控制之间的关系来讨论这些结果。
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Effects of decades of physical driving experience on pre-exposure postural precursors of motion sickness among virtual passengers
Previous research has shown that motion sickness associated with virtual vehicles is more common among passengers than among drivers. Separately, other studies have shown that postural precursors of motion sickness during virtual driving differ as a function of prior experience driving physical vehicles. We investigated the intersection of those prior effects: We asked whether decades of physical driving experience 1) would influence motion sickness among passengers in a virtual vehicle, and 2) would influence postural precursors of motion sickness among passengers in a virtual vehicle. In our study, middle-aged adults were exposed to a virtual vehicle as passengers. Some participants (Physical Drivers) had decades of experience driving physical automobiles, while others (Physical Non-Drivers) had rarely or never driven a physical vehicle. First, we measured head and torso movement as standing participants performed simple visual tasks. Then, each participant watched a recording of the motion of a virtual vehicle, which induced motion sickness in some participants. Afterward, neither the incidence nor the severity of motion sickness differed between Physical Drivers and Physical Non-Drivers. Our analysis of pre-exposure standing body sway revealed postural precursors of motion sickness in measures of the spatial magnitude and temporal dynamics of movement. In statistically significant interactions, these precursors (Well vs. Sick) differed as a function of physical driving experience (Physical Drivers vs. Physical Non-Drivers). Overall, our results indicate that, among virtual passengers, long-term real-world driving experience influenced the postural precursors of motion sickness, but not the incidence or severity of motion sickness. We discuss these results in terms of relationships between perception and motor control in theories of motion sickness etiology.
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