Welcome to the
 
15th IAA Humans in Space Symposium


Graz / Austria, May 22-26, 2005    
 


 
Benefits of Human Presence in Space


Historical, scientific, medical, cultural, and political aspects


Humans in Space is an international scientific symposium dedicated to discussion and research in those human and biological sciences related to long-duration space travel


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Session  I.3 - Neurovestibular System
Theme I: Living and working on the International Space Station
Date: 24 May 2005, 9:00
Chair: Gilles Clement, Angie Bukley

Room A

Paper #
Time
Author(s)
Title
I.3-1
9:00-9:15
A. Clarke
The collinearity between Listing’s plane and the vestibular system in microgravity
I.3-2
9:15-9:30
E.S. Tomilovskaya, M. Berger, F. Gerstenbrand, I.B. Kozlovskaya
Effects of microgravity on characteristics of the vertical gaze fixation reaction (vGFR)
I.3-3
9:30-9:45
Steven T. Moore, H.G. MacDougall, B. Cohen, F. Wuyts, J.B. Clark, X. Lesceu, J.J. Speyer
Head-eye coordination during simulated Orbiter landings
I.3-4
9:45-10:00
Floris Wuyts, G. Pauwels, R. van Spauwen, P. van de Heyning
Pharmaceutical countermeasures for space motion sickness and their different effect on the otolith and semi-circular canal function in humans
I.3-5
10:00-10:15
Gilles Clément, O. Deguine, A. Pavy-LeTraon, S. Béroud, M-C. Costes-Salon
Effects of an anti-motion sickness drug on vestibular habituation to sensory conflict
I.3-6
10:15-10:30
Philippe Souvestre, C. Landrock
Biomedical and performance monitoring & assessment of astronauts by means of an ocular vestibular monitoring system