Araştırma Makalesi

Gender Effect on Motion Sickness Susceptibility

Cilt: 5 Sayı: 2 30 Eylül 2023
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Gender Effect on Motion Sickness Susceptibility

Abstract

The study aimed was to determine whether there was a gender difference in sensitivity to visual stimulation-induced motion sickness (MS). Forty-nine participants (Female: 24, Male: 25) volunteered to join in the study. Participants were exposed to a visual video-recording stimulus to evoke the MS. Simulator Sickness Questionnaire (SSQ) was administered before, after, and 30 min after the MS stimulation to determine MS symptoms. Participants' self-report was used to identify motion sickness. Postural sway (PS) was measured before and immediately after MS stimulation. 58.3% of the female and 48.0% of the male reported that they had MS, while 41.7% of the female and 52.0% of the male reported that they did not have MS. Gender and MS distributions were not significant (p=0.469). Participants with MS before the stimulation had higher PS than those who declared no MS (p=0.008), but PS was not different after the stimulation (p=0.102). Although there was no difference in the pre-test (p=0.231), men with MS had higher PS than women with MS at the post-test (p=0.013). There was a significant increase in PS of men who declared that they had MS after the stimulation (p=0.012). The pre-test (p=0.899) and post-test (p=0.434) SSQ scores of men and women with MS were not different, while women had higher SSQ scores than men at the post-test 30 (p=0.020). Finally, there was no correlation between gender and rates of MS. In terms of symptom severity, females appear to be more susceptible to MS. PS may be a precursor to MS.

Keywords

Kaynakça

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Ayrıntılar

Birincil Dil

İngilizce

Konular

Antrenman

Bölüm

Araştırma Makalesi

Erken Görünüm Tarihi

22 Eylül 2023

Yayımlanma Tarihi

30 Eylül 2023

Gönderilme Tarihi

18 Ağustos 2023

Kabul Tarihi

20 Eylül 2023

Yayımlandığı Sayı

Yıl 2023 Cilt: 5 Sayı: 2

Kaynak Göster

APA
Kocaoğlu, Y., Bayraktar, Y., & Erkmen, N. (2023). Gender Effect on Motion Sickness Susceptibility. Eurasian Journal of Sport Sciences and Education, 5(2), 271-288. https://doi.org/10.47778/ejsse.1345529
AMA
1.Kocaoğlu Y, Bayraktar Y, Erkmen N. Gender Effect on Motion Sickness Susceptibility. Eurasian Journal of Sport Sciences and Education. 2023;5(2):271-288. doi:10.47778/ejsse.1345529
Chicago
Kocaoğlu, Yağmur, Yasemin Bayraktar, ve Nurtekin Erkmen. 2023. “Gender Effect on Motion Sickness Susceptibility”. Eurasian Journal of Sport Sciences and Education 5 (2): 271-88. https://doi.org/10.47778/ejsse.1345529.
EndNote
Kocaoğlu Y, Bayraktar Y, Erkmen N (01 Eylül 2023) Gender Effect on Motion Sickness Susceptibility. Eurasian Journal of Sport Sciences and Education 5 2 271–288.
IEEE
[1]Y. Kocaoğlu, Y. Bayraktar, ve N. Erkmen, “Gender Effect on Motion Sickness Susceptibility”, Eurasian Journal of Sport Sciences and Education, c. 5, sy 2, ss. 271–288, Eyl. 2023, doi: 10.47778/ejsse.1345529.
ISNAD
Kocaoğlu, Yağmur - Bayraktar, Yasemin - Erkmen, Nurtekin. “Gender Effect on Motion Sickness Susceptibility”. Eurasian Journal of Sport Sciences and Education 5/2 (01 Eylül 2023): 271-288. https://doi.org/10.47778/ejsse.1345529.
JAMA
1.Kocaoğlu Y, Bayraktar Y, Erkmen N. Gender Effect on Motion Sickness Susceptibility. Eurasian Journal of Sport Sciences and Education. 2023;5:271–288.
MLA
Kocaoğlu, Yağmur, vd. “Gender Effect on Motion Sickness Susceptibility”. Eurasian Journal of Sport Sciences and Education, c. 5, sy 2, Eylül 2023, ss. 271-88, doi:10.47778/ejsse.1345529.
Vancouver
1.Yağmur Kocaoğlu, Yasemin Bayraktar, Nurtekin Erkmen. Gender Effect on Motion Sickness Susceptibility. Eurasian Journal of Sport Sciences and Education. 01 Eylül 2023;5(2):271-88. doi:10.47778/ejsse.1345529