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The effects of vestibular suppression on helicopter control

Posted on:2006-06-06Degree:M.A.ScType:Thesis
University:University of Toronto (Canada)Candidate:Ali, HaiderFull Text:PDF
GTID:2452390005997646Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
Researchers have hypothesized that a helicopter pilot's semicircular canal (SCC) system can become degraded due to normal in-flight activity and this may lead to accidents in low visibility conditions. This report describes an investigation of the effects of SCC suppression on a helicopter pilot's ability to maintain control in a yaw disturbance rejection task under 3 different visual settings of varying quality. For each visual setting, 4 motion levels were used to emulate the suppressed vestibular system by scaling the physical motion cue given to trained non-pilot subjects.; Statistical analyses of the experimental data indicated that scaling down the physical yaw rate by 15 percent had no significant effect on pilots' performance; and the motion level only became significant when it was scaled down by 50 percent or more. It was also found that there was a significant interaction between the visual and motion level settings used.
Keywords/Search Tags:Helicopter, Motion
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