Title: Could an Electric Current Stop Motion Sickness?

Content: <div id='article-page'><div id='article-content' data-media-url='//news-app-staging.s3.amazonaws.com' data-base-url='//news-app-staging.herokuapp.com' data-sound-name='https://news-app-production.s3.amazonaws.com/articles/677/electric_audio.m4a' data-capture-url='//staging.analytics.lingraphica.com/events/capture_news' data-article-title='Could an Electric Current Stop Motion Sickness?' data-article-id='1055'><script src='//news-app-staging.herokuapp.com/javascripts/getscripts.js'></script><link rel='stylesheet' href='//news-app-staging.herokuapp.com/stylesheets/article.css' type='text/css' /><div class='article'><p><span data-start-time='0' data-end-time='8313'>Some people can get motion sickness from being in moving vehicles such as cars or airplanes.</span> <span data-start-time='8313' data-end-time='16229'>But, a new device could stop motion sickness by suppressing some signals in the brain.</span> <span data-start-time='16229' data-end-time='25313'>Motion sickness occurs when the motion you sense with your inner ear is different from the motion you see. </span> <span data-start-time='25313' data-end-time='31688'>Symptoms of motion sickness are dizziness, nausea and vomiting.</span> <span data-start-time='31688' data-end-time='40646'>People have tried different ways to prevent the condition, including wrist bands and anti-nausea drugs.</span> <span data-start-time='40646' data-end-time='43813'>But often, nothing works.</span> <span data-start-time='43813' data-end-time='52896'>Now, scientists at Imperial College London are working on a device to counteract motion sickness.</span> </p><p><span data-start-time='52896' data-end-time='57104'>Michael Gresty is an expert on the condition.</span> <span data-start-time='57104' data-end-time='64250'>"You imagine being on a bicycle or motorbike; you go around the corner, you lean into the corner, which remains perfectly upright in physics."</span> </p><p><span data-start-time='64250' data-end-time='65979'>You don't do that in a car. </span> <span data-start-time='65979' data-end-time='67500'>You don't do that on a ship.</span> <span data-start-time='67500' data-end-time='71833'>You're actually struggling to find out what is upright and what's the best way of dealing with it.</span> <span data-start-time='71833' data-end-time='79083'>The device sends a weak electrical current through electrodes placed on a person&rsquo;s head. </span> <span data-start-time='79083' data-end-time='86125'>The electric current appears to cause the brain to suppress signals that affect the inner ear.</span> </p></div><div class='control-buttons-sticky' style='display:none;'><div class='control-buttons'><button title='Back' class='back' disabled='disabled'></button><button title='Play' class='play' disabled='disabled'></button><button title='Pause' class='pause' style='display:none;'></button><button title='Forward' class='forward' disabled='disabled'></button><button class='finished-reading' style='display:none;'>Done</button></div></div></div><div id='article-media'><div id='media-image'><img src='https://news-app-production.s3.amazonaws.com/articles/677/sick_image.jpg'/></div></div><div id='question-content' style='display:none;'><div class='vocabulary_question question-container' data-question-id=4741 data-hint-location='25313' style='display:none;'><div class='question' data-sound-name='https://news-app-production.s3.amazonaws.com/articles/677/what_does_nausea_mean.m4a'>What does nausea mean?</div><div class='choices' data-correct-choice='an uneasy feeling in the stomach'><div class='choice' data-sound-name='https://news-app-production.s3.amazonaws.com/articles/677/to_act_a_certain_way.m4a'><span>to act a certain way</span></div><div class='choice' data-sound-name='https://news-app-production.s3.amazonaws.com/articles/677/an_uneasy_feeling_in_the_stomach.m4a'><span>an uneasy feeling in the stomach</span></div><div class='choice' data-sound-name='https://news-app-production.s3.amazonaws.com/articles/677/the_main_idea.m4a'><span>the main idea</span></div><div class='choice' data-sound-name='https://news-app-production.s3.amazonaws.com/articles/677/relating_to_a_large_city.m4a'><span>relating to a large city</span></div></div></div><div class='multiple_choice_question question-container' data-question-id=4742 data-hint-location='8313' style='display:none;'><div class='question' data-sound-name='https://news-app-production.s3.amazonaws.com/articles/677/what_will_the_device_do_to_prevent_sickness.m4a'>What will the device do to prevent sickness?</div><div class='choices' data-correct-choice='suppress brain signals'><div class='choice' data-sound-name='https://news-app-production.s3.amazonaws.com/articles/677/set_off_an_alarm.m4a'><span>set off an alarm</span></div><div class='choice' data-sound-name='https://news-app-production.s3.amazonaws.com/articles/677/suppress_brain_signals.m4a'><span>suppress brain signals</span></div><div class='choice' data-sound-name='https://news-app-production.s3.amazonaws.com/articles/677/beep.m4a'><span>beep</span></div><div class='choice' data-sound-name='https://news-app-production.s3.amazonaws.com/articles/677/suppress_memory.m4a'><span>suppress memory</span></div></div></div><div class='sentence_completion_question question-container' data-question-id=4743 data-hint-location='16229' style='display:none;'><div class='question' data-sound-name='https://news-app-production.s3.amazonaws.com/articles/677/motion_sickness_occurs_when_the_motion_you_sense_is_different_than_what_you__blank__.m4a'>Motion sickness occurs when the motion you sense is different than what you <span class='blank'>see</span>. </div><div class='choices' data-correct-choice='see'><div class='choice' data-sound-name='https://news-app-production.s3.amazonaws.com/articles/677/hear.m4a'><span>hear</span></div><div class='choice' data-sound-name='https://news-app-production.s3.amazonaws.com/articles/677/see.m4a'><span>see</span></div><div class='choice' data-sound-name='https://news-app-production.s3.amazonaws.com/articles/677/want.m4a'><span>want</span></div><div class='choice' data-sound-name='https://news-app-production.s3.amazonaws.com/articles/677/expect.m4a'><span>expect</span></div></div></div><div class='question-buttons'><button class='skip-button'></button><button class='hint-button'></button><button class='speak-button'></button></div></div></div>

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Some people can get motion sickness from being in moving vehicles such as cars or airplanes. But, a new device could stop motion sickness by suppressing some signals in the brain. Motion sickness occurs when the motion you sense with your inner ear is different from the motion you see. Symptoms of motion sickness are dizziness, nausea and vomiting. People have tried different ways to prevent the condition, including wrist bands and anti-nausea drugs. But often, nothing works. Now, scientists at Imperial College London are working on a device to counteract motion sickness.

Michael Gresty is an expert on the condition. "You imagine being on a bicycle or motorbike; you go around the corner, you lean into the corner, which remains perfectly upright in physics."

You don't do that in a car. You don't do that on a ship. You're actually struggling to find out what is upright and what's the best way of dealing with it. The device sends a weak electrical current through electrodes placed on a person’s head. The electric current appears to cause the brain to suppress signals that affect the inner ear.

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