No matter if you're traveling by car, train or boat, experiencing motion sickness can feel debilitating. Motion sickness is a “mismatch between the different sensory systems,” Dr. Desi Schoo, MD, an ...
Motion sickness is typically triggered by slow, up-and-down and left-to-right movements (low-frequency lateral and vertical motion). The more pronounced the motion, the more likely we are to get sick.
You’ve finally made it on vacation, whether it’s a scenic winding mountain road trip, a boating excursion or a plane ride to the beach. Just as you are starting to relax and enjoy yourself, a wave of ...
Does motion sickness turn you into a green, spewing mess? For plenty of people, the answer is yes. Current remedies may or ...
Don’t tell Neil Armstrong, but giant leaps for mankind may leave astronauts feeling a little queasy. In a new experiment, aerospace engineers at the University of Colorado Boulder will work with ...
Motion sickness afflicts one in three adults and one in two children. Vehicle passengers are more likely to suffer from the problem because they can't anticipate what's ahead in the same way the ...
A combination of physiological, neurological, genetic, and habit-linked factors influences how prone one is to feeling motion ...