Ashton Graybiel
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- PhD Aerospace Engineering Stanford University
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(Suggest an Edit or Addition)Ashton Graybiel's Published Works
Published Works
- Diagnostic criteria for grading the severity of acute motion sickness. (1968) (316)
- Analysis of the Electrocardiograms Obtained from 1000 Young Healthy Aviators: Ten Year Follow‐up (1944) (230)
- Sopite syndrome: a sometimes sole manifestation of motion sickness. (1976) (187)
- A new quantitative ataxia test battery. (1965) (136)
- The oculo-gyral illusion; a form of apparent motion which may be observed following stimulation of the semicircular canals. (1946) (132)
- Trends in Systolic Blood Pressure in the Thousand Aviator Cohort over a Twenty‐four‐Year Period (1967) (120)
- Recommendations for Standardization of Electrocardiographic and Vectorcardiographic Leads (1954) (120)
- Observations on human subjects living in a "slow rotation room" for periods of two days. (1960) (118)
- VISUAL ILLUSIONS OF MOVEMENT. (1965) (117)
- The Delay in Visual Reorientation following Exposure to a Change in Direction of Resultant Force on a Human Centrifuge (1951) (106)
- An ataxia test battery not requiring rails. (1968) (104)
- Polycythemic response in normal adult rats to a nonprotein plasma extract from anemic rabbits. (1954) (100)
- MOTION SICKNESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY OF LABYRINTHINE DEFECTIVE AND NORMAL SUBJECTS DURING ZERO GRAVITY MANEUVERS. (1964) (96)
- A theory of motion sickness based on pharmacological reactions (1970) (94)
- Symptomatology under storm conditions in the North Atlantic in control subjects and in persons with bilateral labyrinthine defects. (1968) (93)
- Experiment M131. Human vestibular function (1973) (90)
- Oculogravic illusion. (1952) (85)
- Counterrolling of the eyes and its dependence on the magnitude of gravitational or inertial force acting laterally on the body (1959) (83)
- Vestibular System Part 2: Psychophysics, Applied Aspects and General Interpretations (2012) (81)
- THE DECREASE IN FUNCTIONAL CAPACITY OF THE LUNGS AND HEART RESULTING FROM DEFORMITIES OF THE CHEST: PULMONOCARDIAC FAILURE (1939) (80)
- An attempt to obliterate the patent ductus arteriosus in a patient with subacute bacterial endarteritis (1938) (79)
- Walk on floor eyes closed (WOFEC): a new addition to an ataxia test battery. (1971) (78)
- A Longitudinal Study of Blood Pressure (1962) (77)
- Factors contributing to the delay in the perception of the oculogravic illusion. (1966) (76)
- EFFECTS OF EXPOSURE TO A ROTATING ENVIRONMENT (10 RPM) ON FOUR AVIATORS FOR A PERIOD OF TWELVE DAYS. (1965) (76)
- Evaluation of sixteen anti-motion sickness drugs under controlled laboratory conditions. (1968) (74)
- PROGNOSTIC VALUE OF THE COLD PRESSOR TEST AND THE BASAL BLOOD PRESSURE. BASED ON AN EIGHTEEN-YEAR FOLLOW-UP STUDY. (1964) (73)
- Inversion of the T-wave in lead I or II of the electrocardiogram in young individuals with neurocirculatory asthenia, with thyrotoxicosis, in relation to certain infections, and following paroxysmal ventricular tachycardia (1935) (68)
- Revised normative standards of performance of men on a quantitative ataxia test battery. (1973) (67)
- Evaluation of the relationship between motion sickness symptomatology and blood pressure, heart rate, and body temperature. (1980) (67)
- THE EFFECT OF CHANGING THE RESULTANT LINEAR ACCELERATION RELATIVE TO THE SUBJECT ON NYSTAGMUS GENERATED BY ANGULAR ACCELERATION. (1964) (66)
- Validity of the oculogravic illusion as a specific indicator of otolith function. (1965) (65)
- Some influences of touch and pressure cues on human spatial orientation. (1978) (65)
- The effect of a change in direction of resultant force on sound localization: the audiogravic illusion. (1951) (63)
- A provocative test for grading susceptibility to motion sickness yielding a single numerical score. (1970) (62)
- Constitutional and environmental factors related to serum lipid and lipoprotein levels. (1967) (61)
- Compensatory nystagmus conditioned during adaptation to living in a rotating room. (1962) (59)
- Inversion illusion in parabolic flight: its probable dependence on otolith function. (1966) (58)
- Perception of the postural vertical in normals and subjects with labyrinthine defects. (1963) (58)
- Prevention of experimental motion sickness by scopolamine absorbed through the skin. (1976) (54)
- Structural elements in the concept of motion sickness. (1969) (54)
- The effect of angular acceleration on sound localization; the audiogyral illusion. (1949) (54)
- Elicitation of vestibular side effects by regional vibration of the head. (1974) (51)
- Electrocardiographic changes following the inhalation of tobacco smoke (1938) (51)
- LXIII A Comparison of Ocular Counter-Rolling Movements between Normal Persons and Deaf Subjects with Bilateral Labyrinthine Defects (1963) (51)
- Effect of gravitoinertial force on ocular counterrolling. (1971) (49)
- Thresholds of stimulation of the otolith organs as indicated by the oculogravic illusion. (1955) (47)
- THE DIAL TEST: A STANDARDIZED PROCEDURE FOR THE EXPERIMENTAL PRODUCTION OF CANAL SICKNESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY IN A ROTATING ENVIRONMENT (1965) (47)
- Magnitude of gravitoinertial force, an independent variable in egocentric visual localization of the horizontal. (1966) (47)
- Parabolic flight: loss of sense of orientation. (1979) (46)
- HUMAN PERFORMANCE DURING TWO WEEKS IN A ROOM ROTATING AT THREE RPM. (1964) (46)
- Asymmetric otolith function and increased susceptibility to motion sickness during exposure to variations in gravitoinertial acceleration level. (1987) (46)
- The effective intensity of Coriolis, cross-coupling stimulation is gravitoinertial force dependent: implications for space motion sickness. (1986) (46)
- Susceptibility to acute motion sickness in blind persons. (1970) (46)
- Adaptation to bizarre stimulation of the semicircular canals as indicated by the oculogyral illusion. (1961) (46)
- The effect of water immersion on perception of the oculogravic illusion in normal and labyrinthine-defective subjects. (1968) (46)
- COMPLETE AURICULO–VENTRICULAR DISSOCIATION: A Clinical Study of Seventy-two Cases With a Note on a Curious Form of Auricular Arrhythmia Frequently Observed (1936) (45)
- BUNDLE BRANCH BLOCK; AN ANALYSIS OF 395 CASES (1933) (44)
- Prevention of overt motion sickness by incremental exposure to otherwise highly stressful coriolis accelerations. (1968) (44)
- Theory of antimotion sickness drug mechanisms. (1972) (44)
- Illusions of postural, visual, and aircraft motion elicited by deep knee in the increased gravitoinertial force phase of parabolic flight. Evidence for dynamic sensory-motor calibration to earth gravity force levels. (1981) (43)
- Human performance during adaptation to stress in the Pensacola slow rotation room. (1961) (43)
- Visual horizontal-perception in relation to otolith-function. (1968) (42)
- Circulatory effects following the intravenous administration of pitressin in normal persons and in patients with hypertension and angina pectoris (1941) (42)
- Progressive adaptation to Coriolis accelerations associated with 1-rpm increments in the velocity of the slow rotation room. (1970) (41)
- PERCEPTION OF THE POSTURAL VERTICAL FOLLOWING PROLONGED BODILY TILT IN NORMALS AND SUBJECTS WITH LABYRINTHINE DEFECTS. (1964) (41)
- Labyrinthine defects as shown by ataxia and caloric tests. (1970) (41)
- XXVII A Comparison of the Symptomatology Experienced by Healthy Persons and Subjects with Loss of Labyrinthine Function When Exposed to Unusual Patterns of Centripetal Force in a Counter-Rotating Room (1963) (41)
- Individual differences in susceptibility to motion sickness among six Skylab astronauts. (1975) (40)
- Perceived orientation in free-fall depends on visual, postural, and architectural factors. (1983) (40)
- Role of the otolith organs in the perception of horizontality. (1966) (39)
- Space motion sickness: Skylab revisited. (1980) (37)
- Symptoms resulting from prolonged immersion in water: the problem of zero G asthenia. (1961) (36)
- Symptomatology during prolonged exposure in a constantly rotating environment at a velocity of one revolution per minute. (1961) (35)
- Use of Promethazine to Hasten Adaptation to Provocative Motion (1994) (35)
- Clinical pathological correlations in squirrel monkeys after suppression of semicircular canal function by streptomycin sulfate. (1965) (35)
- Variations in gravitoinertial force level affect the gain of the vestibulo-ocular reflex: implications for the etiology of space motion sickness. (1981) (35)
- Electrocardiographic evidence of cardiac complications in infectious mononucleosis. (1946) (34)
- ANGINA PECTORIS AND DIABETES MELLITUS (1931) (34)
- Direction-specific adaptation effects acquired in a slow rotation room. (1972) (34)
- Treatment of severe motion sickness with antimotion sickness drug injections. (1987) (34)
- VESTIBULAR HABITUATION DURING REPETITIVE COMPLEX STIMULATION: A STUDY OF TRANFER EFFECTS. (1964) (34)
- THE EFFECT OF EXERCISE AND OF FOUR COMMONLY USED DRUGS ON THE NORMAL HUMAN ELECTROCARDIOGRAM, WITH PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO T WAVE CHANGES. (1942) (33)
- On the erythropoietic principle in the blood of rabbits made severely anemic with phenylhydrazine. (1959) (33)
- A new method of equating and presenting bipolar and unipolar extremity leads of the electrocardiogram; advantages gained in visualization of their common relationship to the electric field of the heart. (1951) (33)
- Electrocardiography in Practice (1953) (32)
- Observations of canal sickness and adaptation in chimpanzees and squirrel monkeys in a "slow rotation room". (1962) (32)
- INVERSION OF THE T WAVES IN LEAD II CAUSED BY A VARIATION IN POSITION OF THE HEART (1941) (31)
- Stimulus thresholds of the semicircular canals as a function of angular acceleration. (1948) (31)
- Relationships between blood alcohol, positional alcohol nystagmus and postural equilibrium. (1967) (31)
- Eight-year follow-up of exercise electrocardiograms in healthy, middle-aged aviators. (1981) (30)
- Visual perception of the horizontal following exposure to radial acceleration on a centrifuge. (1951) (30)
- The autokinetic illusion and its significance in night flying (1945) (30)
- Contributing factors in the perception of the oculogravic illusion. (1963) (29)
- Role of vestibular nystagmus in the visual perception of a moving target in the dark. (1946) (29)
- Postural illusions experienced during Z-axis recumbent rotation and their dependence upon somatosensory stimulation of the body surface. (1978) (29)
- A new and objective method for measuring ocular torsion. (1959) (28)
- Antimotion-sickness efficacy of scopolamine 12 and 72 hours after transdermal administration. (1982) (28)
- Vestibular experiments in Gemini flights V and VII. (1967) (28)
- Elicitation of motion sickness by head movements in the microgravity phase of parabolic flight maneuvers. (1984) (28)
- TRENDS IN SYSTOLIC BLOOD PRESSURE IN THE THOUSAND AVIATOR COHORT OVER A 24-YEAR PERIOD, (1967) (27)
- Perception of the horizontal or vertical with head upright, on the side, and inverted under static conditions, and during exposure to centripetal force. (1962) (26)
- Rapid vestibular adaptation in a rotating environment by means of controlled head movements. (1969) (26)
- XXIV Effects of Labyrinthectomy on Canal Sickness in Squirrel Monkey (1962) (25)
- Streptomycin in Ménière's disease. Long-term follow-up. (1967) (25)
- Longevity in military pilots: 37-year followup of the Navy's "1000 aviators". (1978) (25)
- Visual perception of the horizontal during prolonged exposure to radial acceleration on a centrifuge. (1962) (25)
- Perception of the visual horizontal in normal and labyrinthine defective subjects during prolonged rotation. NSAM-936. (1965) (25)
- Changes in subjective estimates of well-being during the onset and remission of motion sickness symptomatology in the slow rotation room. (1970) (25)
- Measurement of otolith function in man (1974) (24)
- The effects of visual deprivation on adaptation to a rotating environment. NSAM-918. (1965) (24)
- The break-off phenomenon: a feeling of separation from the earth experienced by pilots at high altitude. (1957) (24)
- The intermediate coronary syndrome. (1955) (24)
- XXXVIII The Importance of the Otolithic Organs in Man Based upon a Specific Test for Utricular Function (1956) (24)
- Off-vertical rotation: a convenient precise means of exposing the passive human subject to a rotating linear acceleration vector. (1970) (23)
- Evaluation of antimotion sickness drugs: a new effective remedy revealed. (1970) (23)
- The illusory perception of movement caused by angular acceleration and by centrifugal force during flight; methodology and preliminary results. (1947) (23)
- Motion sickness produced by head movement as a function of rotational velocity. (1970) (23)
- Diuretics, potassium depletion, and carbohydrate intolerance. (1971) (23)
- SERIAL ELECTROCARDIOGRAMS: THEIR RELIABILITY AND PROGNOSTIC VALIDITY OVER A 24-YEAR PERIOD, (1967) (23)
- Comparison of effectiveness of some antimotion sickness drugs using recommended and larger than recommended doses as tested in the slow rotation room. (1966) (22)
- Influence of contact cues on the perception of the oculogravic illusion. (1968) (22)
- Head movements in non-terrestrial force environments elicit motion sickness: implications for the etiology of space motion sickness. (1986) (22)
- Human Bioassay of Antimotion Sickness Drugs (1975) (21)
- Head Movements Elicit Motion Sickness during Exposure to Microgravity and Macrogravity Acceleration Levels1 (1985) (21)
- Experimental motion sickness: efficacy of transdermal scopolamine plus ephedrine. (1981) (21)
- Thousand aviator study: nonvestibular contributions to postural equilibrium functions. (1968) (21)
- Altered sensorimotor control of the body as an etiological factor in space motion sickness. (1991) (21)
- Rapid perceptual adaptation to high gravitoinertial force levels: evidence for context-specific adaptation. (1982) (21)
- Semicircular canals as a primary etiological factor in motion sickness. (1972) (21)
- Oculogravic illusion in response to straight-ahead acceleration of CF-104 aircraft. (1979) (20)
- Response from arousal and thermal sweat areas during motion sickness. (1972) (20)
- Motion sickness: acquisition and retention of adaptation effects compared in three motion environments. (1983) (20)
- Comparison of five levels of motion sickness severity as the basis for grading susceptibility (1970) (20)
- Otolith organ activity within earth standard, one-half standard and zero gravity environments. (1965) (20)
- REVIEW OF ANTIMOTION SICKNESS DRUGS FROM 1954-1964. (1965) (20)
- Lack of response to thermal stimulation of the semicircular canals in the weightless phase of parabolic flight. (1966) (20)
- Clinical effectiveness of anti-motion-sickness drugs. Computer review of the literature. (1966) (19)
- Prevention and treatment of space sickness in shuttle-orbiter missions. (1979) (19)
- Bidirectional overadaptation achieved by executing leftward or rightward head movements during unidirectional rotation. (1978) (19)
- Comparison of susceptibility to motion sickness during rotation at 30 rpm in the earth-horizontal, 10 degrees head-up, and 10 degrees head-down positions. (1977) (19)
- Apparent rotation of fixed target associated with linear acceleration in flight. (1949) (18)
- Prevention of motion sickness in flight maneuvers, aided by transfer of adaptation effects acquired in the laboratory: ten consecutive referrals. (1978) (18)
- Rotation at 30 RPM about the A axis after 6 hours in the 10 degree head-down position: effect on susceptibility to motion sickness. (1979) (18)
- A HISTOLOGICAL STUDY OF THE ARTERIOLES OF THE MUSCLE AND SKIN FROM THE ARM AND LEG IN INDIVIDUALS WITH COARCTATION OF THE AORTA. (1935) (18)
- Spatial disorientation in flight. (1951) (18)
- Etiological factors in space motion sickness. (1983) (18)
- Transfer of habituation of motion sickness on change in body position between vertical and horizontal in a rotating environment. (1968) (18)
- Some physiological effects of alternation between zero gravity and one gravity (1975) (17)
- Antimotion Sickness Drug Efficacy (1981) (17)
- EXCRETION OF 17-HYDROXYCORTICOSTEROIDS, CATECHOL AMINES, AND UROPEPSIN IN THE URINE OF NORMAL PERSONS AND DEAF SUBJECTS WITH BILATERAL VESTIBULAR DEFECTS FOLLOWING ACROBATIC FLIGHT STRESS. (1963) (17)
- Linear acceleration and deceleration as factors influencing non-visual orientation during flight. (1949) (17)
- REDUCTION OF NYSTAGMUS AND DISORIENTATION IN HUMAN SUBJECTS (1962) (17)
- Visual and postural motion aftereffects following parabolic flight. (1980) (16)
- Use of betaine and glycocyamine in the treatment of patients with heart disease: preliminary report. (1951) (16)
- Angular velocities, angular accelerations, and coriolis accelerations (1975) (16)
- A sudden-stop vestibulovisual test for rapid assessment of motion sickness manifestations. (1980) (16)
- THE THOUSAND AVIATOR STUDY: DISTRIBUTIONS AND INTERCORRELATIONS OF SELECTED VARIABLES (1965) (16)
- Evaluation of a new antinauseant drug for the prevention of motion sickness. (1977) (16)
- The validity of tests of canal sickness in predicting susceptibility to airsickness and seasickness. (1962) (16)
- A new and simple method of avoiding high resist-ance and overshooting in taking standardized electrocardiograms (1935) (15)
- Egocentric localization of the visual horizontal in normal and labyrinthine-defective observers as a function of head and body tilt (1967) (14)
- The otolith organs as a primary etiological factor in motion sickness - With a note on off-vertical rotation (1970) (14)
- Perception of body weight and body mass at twice earth-gravity acceleration levels. (1984) (14)
- Otolith function as measured by ocular counterrolling (1965) (14)
- Influence of Gravitoinertial Force Level on Apparent Magnitude of Coriolis Cross-Coupled Angular Accelerations and Motion Sickness, (1984) (14)
- The differentiation between symptoms referable to the otolith organs and semicircular canals in patients with nonsuppurative labyrinthitis (1952) (14)
- The illusory perception of movement caused by angular acceleration and by centrifugal force during flight; visually perceived motion and displacement of a fixed target during turns. (1948) (14)
- The law of the otolith organs. (1946) (13)
- Effect of drugs in altering susceptibility to motion sickness in aerobatics and the slow rotation room. (1967) (13)
- Head movements in low and high gravitoinertial force environments elicit motion sickness: implications for space motion sickness. (1987) (12)
- DETERMINANTS OF CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE IN A YOUNG POPULATION. (1965) (12)
- Vertigo as a cause of pilot error in jet aircraft. (1956) (12)
- The absence of residual effects attributable to the otolith organs following unilateral labyrinthectomy in man (1953) (12)
- Comparison of autokinetic movement perceived by normal persons and deaf subjects with bilateral labyrinthine defects (1962) (12)
- Human assay of antimotion sickness drugs. (1975) (12)
- Effect of drugs on ocular counterrolling (1969) (12)
- Incidence of heart disease in school children of Pensacola, Florida. (1952) (12)
- Prolongation of the Q-T interval in the electrocardiogram occurring as a temporary functional disturbance in healthy persons with a proposal that (Q-T) cal. may be used to designate Q-T intervals calculated for the physiologic variables, cycle length, age, and sex. (1948) (12)
- Perception of Body Position and Susceptibility of Motion Sickness as Functions of Angle of Tilt and Angular Velocity in Off-Vertical Rotation, (1973) (11)
- The work electrocardiogram. (1959) (11)
- ROTARY AUTOKINESIS AND DISPLACEMENT OF THE VISUAL HORIZONTAL ASSOCIATED WITH HEAD (BODY) POSITION. (1963) (11)
- Biochemical changes occurring with adaptation to accelerative forces during rotation. (1966) (11)
- Sudden emesis following parabolic flight maneuvers: implications for space motion sickness. (1986) (11)
- Visual localization of the horizontal as a function of body tilt up to 90 degrees from gravitational vertical. (1965) (11)
- Bundle branch block as a temporary phenomenon in thyrotoxicosis; report of a case. (1950) (11)
- THE JOINT REPORT (1939) (11)
- Motion sickness susceptibility under weightless and hypergravity conditions generated by parabolic flight. (1969) (11)
- Acute alcohol ataxia in persons with loss of labyrinthine function. (1968) (11)
- Some influences of vision on susceptibility to motion sickness. (1979) (10)
- LXXIV The Loss of Counter-Rolling of the Eyes in Three Persons Presumably without Functional Otolith Organs (1960) (10)
- Mechanisms underlying modulations of thermal nystagmic responses in parabolic flight. (1981) (10)
- Illusions of postural, visual, and aircraft motion elicited by deep knee bends in the increased gravitoinertial force phase of parabolic flight (1981) (10)
- Effect of hypoxia on serum iron and the unsaturated iron-binding capacity of serum in rats. (1957) (10)
- Clinical testing of the otoliths: a critical assessment of ocular counterrolling. (1984) (10)
- Serial electrocardiograms: their reliability and prognostic validity during a 24-yr. period. (1967) (10)
- Coping with space motion sickness in Spacelab missions. (1981) (9)
- Fascination: a cause of pilot error. (1953) (9)
- Cardiovascular epidemiology, exercise, and health: 40-year followup of the U.S. Navy's "1000 aviators". (1986) (9)
- Duration of oculogyral illusion as a function of the interval between angular acceleration and deceleration; its significance in terms of dynamics of semicircular canals in man. (1952) (9)
- Human centrifuge studies on the relative effectiveness of some antimotion sickness drugs. (1966) (9)
- Symptomatology under storm conditions in the North Atlantic in control subjects and in persons with bilateral labyrinthine defects. NSAM-928. (1965) (9)
- Functional Disturbances of Vestibular Origin of Significance in Space Flight (1967) (9)
- THE ELEVATOR ILLUSION: APPARENT MOTION OF A VISUAL TARGET DURING VERTICAL ACCELERATION. PROJ MR005. 13-6001, SUBTASK 1, REP 89. (1963) (9)
- Threshold of aural pain to high intensity sound. (1959) (9)
- Validity of tests of canal sickness in predicting susceptibility to airsickness and seasickness. (1962) (8)
- Isolation of an Erythropoietic Fraction from the Plasma of Rabbits made severely Anæmic with Phenylhydrazine (1958) (8)
- Nonauditory effects of high intensity sound stimulation on deaf human subjects. (1958) (8)
- Residual effects of storm conditions at sea upon the postural equilibrium functioning of vestibular normal and vestibular defective human subjects.NSAM-935. (1965) (8)
- Experimental M-131--human vestibular function. (1973) (8)
- Somatosensory motion after-effect following earth-horizontal rotation about the Z-axis: a new illusion. (1977) (8)
- SOME OBSERVATIONS OF THE BEHAVIOR OF A VISUAL TARGET AND A VISUAL AFTERIMAGE DURING PARABOLIC FLIGHT MANEUVERS. (1963) (8)
- Orientation in Aerospace Flight (1966) (7)
- Thresholds for the perception of angular acceleration as indicated by the oculogyral illusion (1975) (7)
- DISEASES OF THE HEART: A REVIEW OF SIGNIFICANT CONTRIBUTIONS MADE DURING 1941 (1938) (7)
- Directional sensitivity of semicircular canals following unilateral labyrinthectomy in man. (1953) (7)
- A NEW QUANTITATIVE ATAXIA TEST BATTERY. NSAM-919. (1965) (7)
- The cardiovascular risk associated with different levels and types of elevated blood pressure. (1969) (7)
- Positional alcohol nystagmus in relation to labyrinthine function. (1962) (7)
- ULTRASTRUCTURE OF THE OTOLITH ORGANS IN SQUIRREL MONKEYS AFTER EXPOSURE TO HIGH LEVELS OF GRAVITOINERTIAL FORCE. (1965) (7)
- Evidence for a test of dynamic otolith function considered in relation to responses from a patient with idiopathic progressive vestibular degeneration. (1972) (7)
- Dissecting aneurysm of the aorta (1941) (7)
- AURICULAR FIBRILLATION IN AN ASYMPTOMATIC YOUNG MAN. EFFECTS OF EXERCISE, DIGITALIZATION, ATROPINIZATION AND THE RESTORATION OF NORMAL RHYTHM. (1964) (7)
- THE EFFECT OF GRAVITOINERTIAL FORCE UPON OCULAR COUNTERROLLING (1970) (7)
- A STANDARDIZED LABORATORY MEANS OF DETERMINING SUSCEPTIBILITY TO CORIOLIS (MOTION) SICKNESS (1969) (7)
- Influence of vision on susceptibility to acute motion sickness studied under quantifiable stimulus-response conditions. (1972) (7)
- Illusory rotation of a target during turns in an aircraft. (1948) (7)
- The antimotion sickness drugs. (1973) (7)
- Production of increased circulating hemoglobin in mice. (1956) (7)
- ADAPTATION TO CORIOLIS ACCELERATIONS: ITS TRANSFER TO THE OPPOSITE DIRECTION OF ROTATION AS A FUNCTION OF INTERVENING ACTIVITY AT ZERO VELOCITY, (1969) (6)
- A device to manipulate and to indicate the position of remote test-objects. (1952) (6)
- MAGNITUDE ESTIMATIONS OF CORIOLIS SENSATIONS (1969) (6)
- The Changes in Heart Size in Man During Partial Acclimatization to Simulated High Altitudes (1948) (6)
- Results of preflight and postflight medical examinations (1961) (6)
- THE EFFECTS OF UNILATERAL AND BILATERAL LABYRINTHECTOMY ON CANAL SICKNESS IN THE SQUIRREL MONKEY (1961) (6)
- Salyrgan as a Diuretic: Report of Sixty Cases (1931) (6)
- Cardio-Omentopexy in the Treatment of Angina Pectoris (1940) (6)
- Thousand aviator study - Methodology (1965) (6)
- VESTIBULAR HABITUATION DURING REPETITIVE COMPLEX STIMULATION: A STUDY OF TRANSFER EFFECTS. PROJECT MR005.13-6001, SUBTASK 1, REP NO. 93. (1964) (6)
- Significance of vestibular organs in problems of weightlessness. (1963) (6)
- Behavioral responses of unrestrained normal and labyrinthectomized squirrel monkeys to repeated zero-gravity parabolic flights. (1968) (6)
- GASEOUS EXCHANGE IN THE LUNGS IN OLD AGE * (1963) (6)
- EVALUATION OF SOME ANTIMOTION SICKNESS DRUGS ON THE SLOW ROTATION ROOM (NO. 1). NSAM-922. (1965) (6)
- Side effects of some antimotion sickness drugs as measured by psychomotor test and questionnaires. (1966) (6)
- LXIII Vestibular Mechanisms in Human Behavior (1968) (6)
- EVALUATION AND PREDICTION OF PHYSICAL FITNESS, UTILIZING MODIFIED APPARATUS OF THE HARVARD STEP TEST. (1964) (6)
- A twelve year follow-up study of 1056 U.S. Naval flyers. (1953) (5)
- THRESHOLD OF STIMULATION OF THE HORIZONTAL SEMICIRCULAR CANALS IN MAN WITH PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE FIRST DERIVATIVE OF ANGULAR ACCELERATION AS A STIMULUS. (1947) (5)
- RORSCHACH INDICATIONS OF EMOTIONAL INSTABILITY AND SUSCEPTIBILITY TO MOTION SICKNESS. (1963) (5)
- THE FUNCTION OF THE SEMICIRCULAR CANALS DURING WEIGHTLESSNESS. (1963) (5)
- Altered susceptibility to motion sickness as a function of subgravity level (1973) (5)
- Successful transfer of adaptation acquired in a slow rotation room to motion environments in Navy flight training. (1978) (5)
- THE EFFECTS OF EXPOSURE TO A ROTATING ENVIRONMENT (10 RPM) ON FOUR AVIATORS FOR A PERIOD OF TWELVE DAYS. NSAM-923. (1965) (5)
- ON FLICKER FUSION TESTS AS A MEASURE OF FATIGUE IN AVIATORS (1943) (5)
- Idiopathic Progressive Vestibular Degeneration (1972) (5)
- OBSERVATION OF THE ELEVATOR ILLUSION DURING SUBGRAVITY PRECEDED BY NEGATIVE ACCELERATIONS. (1964) (4)
- Space missions involving the generation of artificial gravity. (1973) (4)
- The clinical symptomatology of coronary insufficiency. (1951) (4)
- MOTION SICKNESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY OF LABYRINTHINE DEFECTIVE AND NORMAL SUBJECTS DURING ZERO GRAVITY MANEUVERS. TECHN DOCUM REP NO. AMRL-TDR-64-47. (1964) (4)
- AN ATAXIA TEST BATTERY NOT REQUIRING THE USE OF RAILS. (1966) (4)
- Motion sickness precipitated in the weightless phase of parabolic flight by coriolis accelerations. (1969) (4)
- Otolith Function and Human Performance1 (1973) (4)
- Vestibular Problems in Relation to Space Travel (1966) (4)
- The effect of varying the time interval between equal and opposite coriolis accelerations. (1971) (4)
- Vestibular mechanisms underlying certain problems in a rotating spacecraft. [symptomology of motion sickness] (1973) (4)
- THE ILLUSORY PERCEPTION OF MOVEMENT CAUSED BY ANGULAR ACCELERATION AND BY CENTRIFUGAL FORCE DURING FLIGHT. IV. ILLUSORY ROTATION OF A TARGET DURING TURNS. (1946) (4)
- Motion sickness susceptibility during rotation at 30 rpm in free-fall parabolic flight. (1979) (4)
- Basic research problems in space medicine: a review. (1960) (4)
- The prevention of motion sickness in orbital flight. (1976) (4)
- The vestibular system (1973) (3)
- THE ILLUSORY PERCEPTION OF MOVEMENT CAUSED BY ANGULAR ACCELERATION AND BY CENTRIFUGAL FORCE DURING FLIGHT. III. HABITUATION AND TECHNIQUE OF ASSUMING THE TURN AS FACTORS IN ILLUSORY PERCEPTION. (1946) (3)
- THE SENSITIVITY TO STIMULATION OF THE SEMICIRCULAR CANALS DURING WEIGHTLESSNESS. REP SAM-TDR-62-148 AND PROJ MR005.13-6001. SUBTASK 1, REP 84. (1963) (3)
- Idiopathic Progressive Vestibular Degeneration in a Young Man: Loss of Vestibular Servation Not the Basis for Detection, (1971) (3)
- Flying stress and heart disease in naval aviators. (1955) (3)
- The labyrinth and space flight. (1964) (3)
- Computer Library Literature Review on Effectiveness of Antimotion Sickness Drugs (1965) (3)
- VESTIBULAR PROBLEMS IN SPACE FLIGHT (1975) (3)
- Structural elements in the concept of motion sickness. NAMI-1055. (1969) (3)
- Screening of squirrel monkeys (Saimiri sciureus) for vestibular function studies. NAMI-1042. (1968) (3)
- Specific Acute Losses of Vestibular Function in Four Patients following Unilateral Section of One or All Components of the Eighth Cranial Nerve (1974) (3)
- Long-term follow-up of lung volume measurements in initially healthy young aviators. (1981) (3)
- STUDIES ON THE RESPONSE TO ACUTE ALTITUDE EXPOSURE WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE POSSIBILITY OF EARLY DETECTION OF HIGH ALTITUDE PULMONARY EDEMA. (1966) (3)
- Goggle Device for Measuring the Visually Perceived Direction of Space (1971) (3)
- Contributions of the space program to our knowledge of motion sickness. (1972) (3)
- Vestibular problems in prolonged manned space flight (1970) (3)
- Perception of the upright and susceptibility to motion sickness as functions of angle of tilt and angular velocity in off-vertical rotation. [human tolerance to angular accelerations] (1973) (3)
- EXCLUSION OF ANGULAR ACCELERATIONS AS THE PRINCIPAL CAUSE OF VISUAL ILLUSIONS DURING PARABOLIC FLIGHT MANEUVERS. (1963) (3)
- Some vestibular responses pertaining to space travel (1965) (2)
- Classics in space medicine. An account of experiments in which two monkeys were recovered unharmed after ballistic space flight. (2010) (2)
- The appearance of compensatory nystagmus in human subjects as a conditioned response during adaptation to a continuously rotating environment. (1961) (2)
- The problem of artificial gravity in space flight progress report, 1 jan. - 30 jun. 1968 (1968) (2)
- Aerospace medicine and Project Mercury Navy participation. (1962) (2)
- Egocentric visual localization in normals and partially blind during exposure to centripetal force. (1968) (2)
- Perception of the postural vertical as a function of practice in normal persons and subjects with labyrinthine defects. (1961) (2)
- Free fall: a partial unique motion environment. (1980) (2)
- Visual Illusions in Night Flying (1951) (2)
- The Role of the Vestinulat Organs in the Exploration of Space. NASA SP-77 (1965) (2)
- Prevention of motion sickness in the slow rotation room by incremental increases in strength of stimulus (1970) (2)
- Otolith function and human performance. (1973) (2)
- Death following coronary thrombosis in a young woman nineteen years of age (1948) (2)
- Susceptibility to reflex vestibular disturbances and motion sickness as a function of mental states of alertness and sleep. (1973) (2)
- A Z-axis recumbent rotating device for use in parabolic flight. (1976) (2)
- ANTECEDENT VISUAL FRAME OF REFERENCE AS A CONTRIBUTING FACTOR IN THE PERCEPTION OF THE OCULOGRAVIC ILLUSION (1961) (2)
- MAGNITUDE OF GRAVITOINERTIAL FORCE, AN INDEPENDENT VARIABLE IN EGOCENTRIC VISUAL LOCALIZATION OF THE HORIZONTAL. PROJ MR005. 13-6001, SUBTASK 1, REP 98. (1964) (2)
- ACUTE ALCOHOL ATAXIA IN RELATION TO VESTIBULAR FUNCTION (1966) (2)
- STIMULATION OF ERYTHROPOIESIS IN NORMAL ADULT RATS BY A NON-PROTEIN EXTRACT OF PLASMA OF ANEMIC RABBITS (1953) (2)
- Chapter 61 – Motion sickness in skylab astronauts (1977) (2)
- The Value of Exercise at One-Half Earth Gravity in Preventing Adaptation to Simulated Weightlessness, (1973) (2)
- THE PROGNOSTIC VALUE OF THE COLD PRESSOR TEST AND THE BASAL BLOOD PRESSURE BASED ON AN EIGHTEEN-YEAR FOLLOW-UP STUDY. PROJ MR005.13-3001, SUBTASK 2, REP 6. (1963) (2)
- AN ATTEMPT TO MEASURE THE DEGREE OF ADAPTATION PRODUCED BY DIFFERING AMOUNTS OF CORIOLIS VESTIBULAR STIMULATION IN THE SLOW ROTATION ROOM. (1969) (2)
- THE ULTRASTRUCTURE OF THE OTOLITH ORGANS IN SQUIRREL MONKEYS AFTER EXPOSURE TO HIGH LEVELS OF GRAVITOINERTIAL FORCE. PROJ MR005. 13-6001, SUBTASK 1, REP NO. 102. (1964) (2)
- Susceptibility to motion sickness among Skylab astronauts (1974) (2)
- VISUAL ILLUSIONS OF MOVEMENT. RES REP. NSAM-877. (1963) (2)
- Value of exercise at one-half earth gravity in preventing the deconditioning effects of simulated weightlessness. (1974) (2)
- Comparison of the cardiovascular dynamics and the size and fat content of the heart in lean and fat dogs. (1959) (1)
- PRACTICAL AND THEORETICAL IMPLICATIONS BASED ON LONG-TERM FOLLOW-UP OF MENIERE'S PATIENTS TREATED WITH STREPTOMYCIN SULFATE, (1965) (1)
- Sunburn as a cause of temporary lowering of blackout threshold in flyers. (1948) (1)
- LIMITATIONS OF SUBJECTIVE SYMPTOMATOLOGY IN THE PREVENTION AND TREATMENT OF HEART DISEASE † (1956) (1)
- Flight behavior of birds in weightlessness [proceedings]. (1977) (1)
- Prevention of reflex vestibular disturbances and motion sickness by natural means and by drugs (1970) (1)
- Airborne testing of three antimotion sickness preparations (1976) (1)
- Longitudinal study of healthy young men followed over an eighteen-year period. (1962) (1)
- Prevention of overt motion sickness by incremental exposure to otherwise highly stressful Coriolis accelerations. NAMI-1044. (1968) (1)
- Clinical pathological correlations in squirrel monkeys after suppression of semicircular canal function by streptomycin sulfate. NSAM-940. (1965) (1)
- Some observations on the behavior of a visual target and a visual after-image during parabolic flight maneuvers. (1962) (1)
- Air travel and heart disease. (1954) (1)
- Human performance during adaptation to stress in the Pensacola Slow Rotation Room. (Res MR005. 13-6001 Subtask 1, Rep). (1960) (1)
- Determining the effectiveness of fractional G levels in reducing circulatory deconditioning of space flight crews - A new technique and preliminary results. (1966) (1)
- Hereditary methemoglobinemia: a family study with attention to the redox state of the myoglobin. (1970) (1)
- Motion sickness precipitated in the weightless phase of parabolic flight by Coliolis accelerations. NAMI-1061. (1969) (1)
- DISEASES OF THE HEART: A REVIEW OF SOME CONTRIBUTIONS MADE DURING 1936 (1936) (1)
- [Disorientation; one of the causes of error in pilots]. (1955) (1)
- A STUDY OF THE PHYSIOLOGICAL CHANGES WHICH OCCUR DURING ACCLIMATIZATION TO HIGH ALTITUDE. AN ACTIVE FORM OF HEMOGLOBIN FORMED DURING ACCLIMATIZATION (1946) (1)
- Panel Discussion: “Is There a Need for a Manned Space Laboratory?” (1962) (1)
- [Disorientation, one of the causes of pilot error]. (1955) (1)
- Effects of decompression; 70 subjects repeatedly exposed to a simulated altitude of 20,000 feet during approximately one month. (1948) (1)
- Vestibular side effects in the orbital stage of Skylab II and III missions (1975) (1)
- Factors contributing to the ballistocardiographic waveform in healthy middle-aged men. (1967) (1)
- Transfer of habituation on change in body position between vertical and horizontal in a rotating environment (1968) (1)
- Diet in treatment of asymptomatic coronary heart disease in military pilots. (1960) (1)
- Motion sickness susceptibility under weightless and hypergravity conditions generated by parabolic flight. NAMI-1057. (1969) (1)
- Some of the mechanisms underlying motion sickness (1972) (1)
- Some physiological aspects of artificial gravity (2006) (1)
- Observations on Small Primates in Space Flight (1960) (1)
- A STATISTICAL ANALYSIS OF THE MEDICAL COMPLAINTS OF FLYING PERSONNEL AT THE NAVAL AIR STATION, PENSACOLA, FLA. (1943) (1)
- Auricular fibrillation following hypothermia; report of a case. (1950) (0)
- Predicting the Susceptibility to Vestibular Sickness Under Conditions of Weightlessness (1965) (0)
- A LONGITUDINAL STUDY OF HEALTHY YOUNG MEN: CORRELATION COEFFICIENTS. PROJ MR005.13-3001, SUBTASK 2, REP 7. (1963) (0)
- Paul Dudley White: Biographical notes (1965) (0)
- A comparison of effectiveness of some antimotion sickness drugs using recommended and larger than recommended doses as tested in the slow rotation room. NSAM-945. (1965) (0)
- Problems involving the pilot and his task; the changing emphasis in aviation medicine. (1956) (0)
- Ballistocardiographic waveform--some contributing factors. (1967) (0)
- Progress in Internal Medicine: DISEASES OF THE HEART A REVIEW OF CONTRIBUTIONS MADE DURING 1934 (1935) (0)
- FACTORS DETERMINING SERUM LIPID CONCENTRATIONS. PROJ MR005. 13-3001, SUBTASK 2, REP 8. (1963) (0)
- THE EFFECT OF VARIOUS ARRANGEMENTS OF LIGHTS IN REDUCING AUTOKINESIS. (1944) (0)
- Medicine and the conquest of space. (1960) (0)
- EFFECTS OF DECOMPRESSION ON THIRTY-FIVE SUBJECTS REPEATEDLY EXPOSED TO A SIMULATED ALTITUDE OF 20,000 FEET DURING APPROXIMATELY ONE MONTH (1947) (0)
- The Effectiveness of Benactyzine Hydrochloride and Other Antimotion Sickness Drugs in New Combinations (1971) (0)
- STUDIES DEALING WITH THE AUTOKINETIC ILLUSION. (1944) (0)
- Effect of drugs on ocular counterrolling. NAMI-1046. (1968) (0)
- Aerometeorism: a followup report. (1961) (0)
- Paul A. Campbell 1902–1982 (1982) (0)
- A negative form of the oculo-gravic illusion. (1948) (0)
- EXCLUSION OF ANGULAR ACCELERATIONS AS THE PRINCIPAL CAUSE OF VISUAL ILLUSIONS DURING PARABOLIC FLIGHT MANEUVERS. TECHN DOCUM REP SAM-TDR-63-78. (1963) (0)
- The frailty of man in flight. (1958) (0)
- Visual illusions of movement. (Proj. MR005.13-6001, Subtask 1, NASA Order R-93).: (446922004-001) (2013) (0)
- History of the development of the Physiological Research Department and the Altitude Training Unit. (1946) (0)
- Cardiovascular problems in aviation medicine; evaluation of heart murmurs. (2019) (0)
- AEROMEDICAL STUDIES- A. CLINICAL MEDICAL OBSERVATIONS (1962) (0)
- Future trends in military aviation medicine. (1957) (0)
- Visual illusion in night flying. (1951) (0)
- Biological considerations of manned space flight (1964) (0)
- Effect of prolonged vestibular stimulation. (1960) (0)
- PERCEPTION OF THE POSTURAL VERTICAL FOLLOWING PROLONGED BODILY TILT IN NORMALS AND SUBJECTS WITH VESTIBULAR DEFECTS. PROJ MR005.13-6001, SUBTASK 1, REP 81. (1963) (0)
- Clinical applications of experimental observations in congestive failure. (1957) (0)
- Transdermal Hyoscine (Scopolamine) (1985) (0)
- Otolith organ activity within earth standard, one-half standard, and zero gravity environments. NSAM-943. (1965) (0)
- FACTORS DETERMINING SERUM LIPID CONCENTRATIONS (1963) (0)
- [THE VALIDITY OF THE EWALD I LAW AND THE IMPORTANCE OF THE VARIOUS LEADS IN ELECTRONYSTAGMOGRAPHY]. (1963) (0)
- Case 18141: Five Weeks' Ascites, Orthopnea and Cough (1932) (0)
- OBSERVATION OF THE ELEVATOR ILLUSION DURING SUBGRAVITY PRECEDED BY NEGATIVE ACCELERATIONS. REP SAM-TDR-62-141 AND PROJ MR005. 13-6001, SUBTASK 1, REP 83. (1963) (0)
- Coronary heart disease (1958) (0)
- Case 18182: Elevation of Basal Metabolism and Transient Positive Blood Cultures in a Case of Rheumatic Heart Disease (1932) (0)
- Successful trnasfer of adaptation environments in navy flight training (1977) (0)
- Medical Aspects of Flying (1942) (0)
- EXCRETION OF 17-HYDROXYCORTICOSTEROIDS, CATECHOL AMINES, AND UROPEPSIN IN THE URINE OF NORMAL PERSONS AND DEAF SUBJECTS WITH BILATERAL VESTIBULAR DEFECTS FOLLOWING ACROBATIC FLIGHT STRESS. PROJ MR005.13-0004, SUBTASK 2, REP 1. (1963) (0)
- Biological Considerations of Manned Flight in Space (1965) (0)
- The Thousand Aviator Study - Smoking history correlates of selected physiological, biochemical, and anthropometric measures (1966) (0)
- Human otolith function - Measurements in Gemini flights 5 and 7 (1966) (0)
- EGOCENTRIC VISUAL LOCALIZATION IN NORMALS AND PARTIALLY BLIND DURING A CHANGE IN DIRECTION OF GRAVITOINERTIAL FORCE. (1967) (0)
- Some physiological aspects of artificial gravity. [gravitational effects on human orthostatic tolerance and physical fitness (1973) (0)
- Human otolith function, experiment M009 (1971) (0)
- RESEARCH INTO THE EFFECTS OF ANGULAR VELOCITY, ANGULAR ACCELERATION, AND CORIOLIS ACCELERATIONS ON HEALTHY PERSONS AND ON PERSONS WITH DECREASED OR LOST FUNCTION OF THE SEMICIRCULAR CANALS, (1961) (0)
- THE EFFECT OF CHANGING THE RESULTANT LINEAR ACCELERATION RELATIVE TO THE SUBJECT ON NYSTAGMUS GENERATED BY ANGULAR ACCELERATION. PROJ MR005.13-6001, SUBTASK 1, REP 99. (1964) (0)
- REVIEW OF DISEASES OF THE HEART FOR 1941 (1944) (0)
- Visual localization of the horizontal as a function of body tilt up to plus or minus 90 deg from gravitational vertical (1965) (0)
- THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE VESTIBULAR ORGANS IN THE PROBLEMS POSED BY WEIGHTLESSNESS (1962) (0)
- 1966RochesterConferenceon DataAcquisition and Processingin Biology and Medicine (1966) (0)
- Death following coronary thrombosis in a young woman 19 years of age; case report with autopsy findings. (1948) (0)
- Case 18082: Rapidly Developing Ascites and Cachexia in an Illness of Short (1932) (0)
- SOME RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN BLOOD ALCOHOL, POSITIONAL ALCOHOL NYSTAGMUS (PAN), AND POSTURAL EQUILIBRIUM (ATAXIA). NSAM-917. (1965) (0)
- INTERDEPENDENCE AMONG SOME FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH CORONARY HEART DISEASE. PROJ MR005.13-3001, SUBTASK 2, REP NO. 9. (1964) (0)
- REPRESENTATION OF ACTION BOUNDARIES IN THE PREFRONTAL CORTEX OF THE MACAQUE MONKEY (2004) (0)
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