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Fig. 10 | Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications

Fig. 10

From: Restricting the distribution of visual attention reduces cybersickness

Fig. 10

Self-reported motion sickness susceptibility (MSSQ) of individual subjects in Experiment 2 plotted as a function of their attentional allocation scores derived from SART. The two rows use different measures of attentional allocation: the mean difference in reaction times for central and peripheral targets with coherent background motion (top row), or the mean difference after normalizing for reaction times in the incoherent motion conditions (bottom row). Positive values of ΔRT correspond to more attention to the periphery. Lines show the regression fits. The left graph plots the total MSSQ scores, and the middle and right graphs plot the MSSQ child and MSSQ adult subscores

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