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Dive into the research topics where Charles W. Deroshia is active.

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Featured researches published by Charles W. Deroshia.


Attention Perception & Psychophysics | 1996

Reduction of the elevator illusion from continued hypergravity exposure and visual error-corrective feedback

Robert B. Welch; Malcolm M. Cohen; Charles W. Deroshia

Ten subjects served as their own controls in two conditions of continuous, centrifugally produced hypergravity (+2 Gz) and a 1-G control condition. Before and after exposure, open-loop measures were obtained of (1) motor control, (2) visual localization, and (3) hand-eye coordination. During exposure in the visual feedback/hypergravity condition, subjects received terminal visual error-corrective feedback from their target pointing, and in the no-visual feedback/hypergravity condition they pointed open loop. As expected, the motor control measures for both experimental conditions revealed very short lived underreaching (the muscle-loading effect) at the outset of hypergravity and an equally transient negative aftereffect on returning to 1 G. The substantial (approximately 17°) initial elevator illusion experienced in both hypergravity conditions declined over the course of the exposure period, whether or not visual feedback was provided. This effect was tentatively attributed to habituation of the otoliths. Visual feedback produced a smaller additional decrement and a postexposure negative aftereffect, possible evidence for visual recalibration. Surprisingly, the target-pointing error made during hypergravity in the no-visual-feedback condition was substantially less than that predicted by subjects’ elevator illusion. This finding calls into question the neural outflow model as a complete explanation of this illusion.


Attention Perception & Psychophysics | 2001

Effects of gravitational and optical stimulation on the perception of target elevation

Malcolm M. Cohen; Arnold E. Stoper; Robert B. Welch; Charles W. Deroshia

To examine the combined effects of gravitational and optical stimulation on perceived target elevation, we independently altered gravitational—inertial force and both the orientation and the structure of a background visual array. While being exposed to 1.0, 1.5, or 2.0 Gz in the human centrifuge at NASA Ames Research Center, observers attempted to set a target to the apparent horizon. The target was viewed against the far wall of a box that was pitched at various angles. The box was brightly illuminated, had only its interior edges dimly illuminated, or was kept dark. Observers lowered their target settings as Gz was increased; this effect was weakened when the box was illuminated. Also, when the box was visible, settings were displaced in the same direction as that in which the box was pitched. We attribute our results to the combined influence of otolith—oculomotor mechanisms that underlie the elevator illusion and visual—oculomotor mechanisms (optostatic responses) that underlie the perceptual effects of viewing pitched visual arrays.


Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 1985

Circadian rhythms and athletic performance.

Charles M. Winget; Charles W. Deroshia; Daniel C. Holley


Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine | 1984

A review of human physiological and performance changes associated with desynchronosis of biological rhythms

Charles M. Winget; Charles W. Deroshia; Carol L. Markley; Daniel C. Holley


Human performance in extreme environments : the journal of the Society for Human Performance in Extreme Environments | 1999

Effects of Command and Control Vehicle (C2V) operational environment on soldier health and performance

Patricia S. Cowings; William B. Toscano; Charles W. Deroshia; Richard A. Tauson


Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine | 1993

Performance and mood-state parameters during 30-day 6 degrees head-down bed rest with exercise training

Charles W. Deroshia; J. E. Greenleaf


Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine | 2000

Promethazine as a motion sickness treatment: impact on human performance and mood states.

Patricia S. Cowings; William B. Toscano; Charles W. Deroshia; Neal E. Miller


Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine | 2007

Converging indicators for assessing individual differences in adaptation to extreme environments.

Patricia S. Cowings; William B. Toscano; Charles W. Deroshia; Bruce Taylor; Aliah Hines; Andrew Bright; Anika Dodds


Inactivity: Physiological Effects | 1986

6 – Psychosocial and Chronophysiological Effects Of Inactivity and Immobilization

Charles M. Winget; Charles W. Deroshia


The Lancet | 1982

PHYSIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF BED REST

BenjaminH. Natelson; Charles W. Deroshia; BarryE. Levin

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Arnold E. Stoper

California State University

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