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Journal Article

Citation

Craig GL, Jennings SA, Swail CP. Aviat. Space Environ. Med. 2000; 71(5): 476-484.

Affiliation

Flight Research Laboratory, National Research Council of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario. greg.craig@nrc.ca

Copyright

(Copyright © 2000, Aerospace Medical Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10801000

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The helmet-mounted display (HMD) research program at the Flight Research Laboratory of the National Research Council of Canada examined the effects of HMD camera platform dynamics on pilot workload. Many currently fielded visually coupled HMD systems do not reproduce head movements in the roll axis which can lead to the presentation of visual information that is not consistent with vestibular and proprioceptive information. HYPOTHESIS: Our hypothesis was that this sensory conflict can induce motion sickness and increase pilot workload. METHODS: To examine this premise, three pilots flew a series of standardized maneuvers with or without roll compensation in the camera platform of a visually coupled HMD system. RESULTS: Increases in motion sickness symptoms and pilot workload were noted during complex, high-workload maneuvers when no roll compensation was present in the camera platform. During the most demanding maneuvers, the lack of roll compensation in the camera platform made it difficult for the evaluation pilot to control the helicopter. CONCLUSIONS: Roll compensation in visually coupled HMD systems reduces pilot workload and' motion sickness during critical flight periods where pilot workload may already be considerable.


Language: en

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