Investigating brain activities and neural comodulations in motion sickness between passengers and drivers - Huang KC, John AR, Jung TP, Tsai WF, Yu YH, Lin CT.

It is common to believe that passengers are more adversely affected by motion sickness than drivers. However, no study has compared passengers and drivers' neural activities and drivers experiencing motion sickness (MS). Therefore, this study attempts to e...
Source: SafetyLit - Category: International Medicine & Public Health Tags: Distraction, Fatigue, Chronobiology, Vigilance, Workload Source Type: news