Ashton Graybiel

Affiliations: 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, United States 
Area:
Spatial Orientation
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"Ashton Graybiel"
Mean distance: 15.13 (cluster 23)
 
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Publications

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GRAYBIEL A, CLARK B, MacCORQUO DALE K. (2010) The illusory perception of movement caused by angular acceleration and by centrifugal force during flight; methodology and preliminary results. Journal of Experimental Psychology. 37: 170-7
CLARK B, GRAYBIEL A, MacCORQUODALE K. (2008) 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. Journal of Experimental Psychology. 38: 298-309
GRAYBIEL A, CLARK B, ZARRIELLO JJ. (1998) Observations on human subjects living in a "slow rotation room" for periods of two days. Archives of Neurology. 3: 55-73
WHITESIDE TC, GRAYBIEL A, NIVEN JI. (1996) VISUAL ILLUSIONS OF MOVEMENT. Brain : a Journal of Neurology. 88: 193-210
Lackner JR, Graybiel A. (1994) Use of promethazine to hasten adaptation to provocative motion. Journal of Clinical Pharmacology. 34: 644-8
Lackner JR, Graybiel A, DiZio PA. (1991) Altered sensorimotor control of the body as an etiological factor in space motion sickness. Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine. 62: 765-71
Lackner JR, Graybiel A. (1987) Head movements in low and high gravitoinertial force environments elicit motion sickness: implications for space motion sickness. Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine. 58: A212-7
Graybiel A, Lackner JR. (1987) Treatment of severe motion sickness with antimotion sickness drug injections. Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine. 58: 773-6
Lackner JR, Graybiel A, Johnson WH, et al. (1987) Asymmetric otolith function and increased susceptibility to motion sickness during exposure to variations in gravitoinertial acceleration level. Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine. 58: 652-7
Lackner JR, Graybiel A. (1986) Head movements in non-terrestrial force environments elicit motion sickness: implications for the etiology of space motion sickness. Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine. 57: 443-8
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