seasickness and the inner ear
On Mar 22, 12:06*pm, wrote:
On Mar 22, 12:49*am, wf3h wrote:
On Mar 21, 11:31*pm, HK wrote:
wf3h wrote:
saw an article in the newest (print) version of 'scientific
american'...there's active research underway regarding an alternative
theory of why people get seasick
the conventional explanation has to do with a disparity between what
the inner ear senses and what the eye sees.
however, there is a growing body of evidence from psychologists
showing that the movement of the body is responsible for seasickness,
and that by standing with your feet about 1.5 feet apart you can
significantly reduce seasickness by increasing the body's stability..
I dunno. I have a buddy who gets seasick in a calm sea even when he is
sitting in a deck chair with nothing moving.
one of the points in the article was that sitting in a bathtub of
water enables you to avoid being seasick...though this might be hard
to do at the helm...
Don't you know by now that Harry knows more about the subject than ANY
research scientist because he has a "buddy" that gets sea sick?- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Yale / Dr-Dr / Lobster boat / CA photo shoot / Rounding the Horn /
Fireboat welcome / etc. / etc. / etc.
|