Postural Effects of the Horizon on Land and at Sea

Motion of a ship at sea creates challenges for control of the body. Anecdotal reports suggest that the body can be stabilized by standing on the open deck and looking at the horizon. This advice contrasts with land-based findings that looking at the horizon leads to increased body sway. We measured standing body sway in experienced maritime crew members on land and at sea. On land, body sway was greater when subjects looked at the horizon than when they did not—the classical effect. At sea, body sway was greater in a closed cabin than on the open deck. On the open deck, body sway when looking at the horizon was reduced relative to sway when looking at middistance targets on the ship. The results are consistent with centuries of anecdotal advice given to sea travelers and raise new questions about the referents that are used for the control of standing posture.

[1]  W Bles,et al.  The mechanism of physiological height vertigo. II. Posturography. , 1980, Acta oto-laryngologica.

[2]  W Bles,et al.  The mechanism of physiological height vertigo. , 1978, Transactions of the American Neurological Association.

[3]  Michael G. Parsons,et al.  Effects of motion at sea on crew performance: A survey , 2002 .

[4]  Benoît G. Bardy,et al.  Postural stabilization of looking , 1999 .

[5]  Thomas G Dobie,et al.  The influence of visual reference on stance and walking on a moving surface. , 2003, Aviation, space, and environmental medicine.

[6]  David A. Winter,et al.  Human balance and posture control during standing and walking , 1995 .

[7]  T. Stoffregen,et al.  Postural instability precedes motion sickness , 1998, Brain Research Bulletin.

[8]  T. Stoffregen,et al.  Body sway at sea for two visual tasks and three stance widths. , 2009, Aviation, space, and environmental medicine.

[9]  T. Brandt,et al.  Differential effects of retinal target displacement, changing size and changing disparity in the control of anterior/posterior and lateral body sway , 2004, Experimental Brain Research.

[10]  W. Bles,et al.  Motion sickness. , 2000, Current opinion in neurology.

[11]  T. Stoffregen,et al.  Visual vigilance performance and standing posture at sea. , 2010, Aviation, space, and environmental medicine.

[12]  W Bles,et al.  The mechanism of physiological height vertigo. I. Theoretical approach and psychophysics. , 1980, Acta oto-laryngologica.

[13]  H Hsiao,et al.  Height, surface firmness, and visual reference effects on balance control , 2001, Injury prevention : journal of the International Society for Child and Adolescent Injury Prevention.

[14]  David N. Lee Visual proprioceptive control of stance , 1975 .

[15]  M. Guerraz,et al.  Ocular versus extraocular control of posture and equilibrium , 2008, Neurophysiologie Clinique/Clinical Neurophysiology.

[16]  Mark S Redfern,et al.  Visually induced postural sway in anxiety disorders. , 2007, Journal of anxiety disorders.

[17]  E. C. B. Lee,et al.  Safety and Survival at Sea , 1971 .

[18]  T. Stoffregen,et al.  On specification and the senses , 2001, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[19]  Moira B. Flanagan,et al.  Motion Sickness and Postural Sway in Console Video Games , 2008, Hum. Factors.