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| | Books by Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Books in the extended shelves: Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Acquired bundle branch block in the naval aviator population (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Raphael F. Smith, Charles A. Sanders, J. Warren Harthorne, David H. Jackson, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Acute alcohol ataxia in relation to vestibular function (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Alfred R. Fregly, Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Adaptation to coriolis accelerations: its transfer to the opposite direction of rotation as a function of intervening activity at zero velocity (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by James T. Reason, Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Airsickness and anxiety (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Gary J. Tucker, Roger F. Reinhardt, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): An analysis of the d.c. component of the local electroretinogram in the intact eye of the cat (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Roy H. Steinberg, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Anthropometric determinations of american born Macaca mulatta (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Keith A. Clark, Albert E. New, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The application of college and flight background questionnaires as supplementary noncognitive measures for use in the selection of student naval aviators (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory, Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace and Regional Medical Center, 1970., 1970), also by Ronald M. Bale, Rosalie K. Ambler, and Naval Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory (U.S.) (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Architecture of the otolith end organ : with some functional considerations (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1965., 1965), also by Makoto Igarashi and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Assessment of semicircular canal function. [Part] I, Measurements of subjective effects produced by triangular waveforms of angular velocity (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Fred E. Guedry, Joel W. Norman, Gale G. Owens, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Assessment of semicircular canal function. [Part] II, Individual differences in subjective angular displacement produced by triangular waveforms of angular velocity (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Gale G. Owens, Fred E. Guedry, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): An ataxia test battery not requiring the use of rails (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Alfred R. Fregly, Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): An attempt to measure the degree of adaptation produced by differing amounts of coriolis vestibular stimulation in the slow rotation room (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by James T. Reason, Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Autonomic responses to vestibular stimulation (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Pei Chin Tang, Bo E. Gernandt, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Biochemical changes occurring with adaptation to accelerative forces during rotation (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Colehour James K., Ashton Graybiel, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Cardiac output and regional blood flow in conscious rats exposed to acute hypoxia (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by N. S. Nejad, Eric Ogden, Thomas N. Fast, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and Ames Research Center (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Centrifugation of the white-fronted capuchin monkey, Cebus albifrons (Humboldt) (Pensacola, Florida.: Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by James C. Jr Knepton, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States. Office of Space Science and Applications, and United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Changes in subjective estimates of well-being during the onset and remission of motion sickness symptomatology in the slow rotation room (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by James T. Reason, Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Comparative evaluation of the radiation environment in the biosphere and in space (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Hermann J. Schaefer, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Comparison of five levels of motion sickness severity as the basis for grading susceptibility (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1970., 1970), also by Earl F. Miller, Ashton Graybiel, Manned Spacecraft Center (U.S.), United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): A comparison of subjective responses to semicircular canal stimulation produced by rotation about two axes (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1970., 1970), also by Fred E. Guedry, Richard D. Gilson, Charles W. Stockwell, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Computer library literature review on effectiveness of antimotion sickness drugs (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1965., 1965), also by Charles D. Wood, Richard Trumbull, Robert J Wherry, Ashton Graybiel, Robert S. Kennedy, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): A computer method for studying the postexercise ballistocardiogram (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by David H. Jackson, Efrain A. Molina, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Conduction velocity in nerve exposed to a high magnetic field (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Vernon R. Reno, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Constitutional and environmental factors related to serum lipid and lipoprotein levels (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by William R. Harlan, Robert J. Wherry, Ashton Graybiel, Robert E Mitchell, Albert Oberman, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and United States Public Health Service (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The Coriolis Acceleration Platform . a unique vestibular research device (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by W. Carroll Hixson, John J. Anderson, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): A counterrotator for human centrifuge application (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by W. Carroll Hixson, John J. Anderson, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Cross-validation of a brief vestibular disorientation test administered by a variety of personnel (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Rosalie K. Ambler, Fred E. Guedry, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Development of an aviation combat criterion : preliminary report (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by George M. Rickus, James R. Berkshire, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Diagnostic criteria for grading the severity of acute motion sickness (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Ashton Graybiel, Cramer Dewey B., Earl F. Miller, Charles D. Wood, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Directional differences in visual acuity during vertical nystagmus (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by W. Carroll Hixson, Jorma I. Niven, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Dynamic response of the head and neck of the living human to -Gx impact acceleration. [Part] I, Experimental design and preliminary experimental data (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Channing L. Ewing, David B. Gillis, Lawrence M. Patrick, George W. Beeler, D. J. Thomas, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Effect of blood pH and CO₂ tension on the performance of the heart-lung preparation (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by N. S. Nejad, Eric Ogden, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and Ames Research Center (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The effect of drugs in altering susceptibility to motion sickness in aerobatics and the slow rotation room (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Frederick R. Deane, Arthur C. Cawrse, Ashton Graybiel, Charles D. Wood, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Effect of drugs on ocular counterrolling (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Earl F. Miller, Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and Manned Spacecraft Center (U.S.) (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The effect of gravitoinertial force upon ocular counterrolling (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1970., 1970), also by Earl F. Miller, Ashton Graybiel, United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and Manned Spacecraft Center (U.S.) (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Effect of hypoxia on myocardium in heart-lung preparation (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by N. S. Nejad, Eric Ogden, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and Ames Research Center (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The effect of prior exposure to a harmful event upon subsequent performance under threat (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Xenia Coulter, Mary Anne Overman, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The effect of semicircular canal stimulation during tilting on the subsequent perception of the visual vertical (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Charles W. Stockwell, Fred E. Guedry, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The effect of varying the time interval between equal and opposite coriolis accelerations (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by James T. Reason, Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The effect of water immersion on perception of the oculogravic illusion in normal and labyrinthine-defective subjects (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Ashton Graybiel, Robert S. Kennedy, Bernard D. Newsom, Earl F Miller, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Effects of perceived scoring formula on some aspects of test performance (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Lawrence K. Waters and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Effects of simulated high altitude on left circumflex coronary flow, blood pressure, cardiac output, and myocardial metabolism in the unmedicated greyhound dog (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by LeRoy S. Wirthlin, E. Peter Beck, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The egocentric localization of the visual horizontal in normal and labyrinthine-defective observers as a function of head and body tilt (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Brant Clark, Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Egocentric visual localization in normals and partially blind during a change in direction of gravitoinertial force (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Brant Clark, Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The electroencephalogram of the squirrel monkey (Saimiri sciureus) in a very high magnetic field (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Dietrich Eberhard Beischer, James C. Knepton, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Environmental factors affecting the performance of infrared CO₂ analyzer and the estimation of alveolar CO₂ tension (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Pei Chin Tang, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Evaluation of antimotion sickness drugs: a new effective remedy revealed (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1970., 1970), also by Charles D. Wood, Ashton Graybiel, Manned Spacecraft Center (U.S.), United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Evaluation of otolith organ function by means of ocular counterrolling measurements (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Earl F. Miller, Manned Spacecraft Center (U.S.), United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Evaluation of several experimental aviation selection tests (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by James R. Berkshire and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Evaluation of sixteen antimotion sickness drugs under controlled laboratory conditions (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Charles D. Wood, Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Exertional rhabdomyolysis in naval aviation officer candidates (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Raphael F. Smith and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Exposure of man to low intensity magnetic fields in a coil system (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Dietrich E. Beischer, James C. Knepton, Earl F. Miller, United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Exposure of tradescantia microspores to periodic vibrations of 40-100 hertz (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by James C. Knepton, Lynda J. Bales, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and United States. Office of Space Science and Applications (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Factor analysis of aviation training measures and post-training performance evaluations (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Richard F. Booth, James R. Berkshire, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Factors contributing to the ballistocardiographic wave form in healthy middle aged males (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by David H. Jackson, Ashton Graybiel, Robert E. Mitchell, Albert Oberman, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and United States Public Health Service (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Flare hazards at solar minimum : dosimetric evaluation of the class 2 flare of February 5, 1965 (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Hermann J. Schaefer, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Functional organization of brain stem respiratory complex in the cat (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Pei Chin Tang, U.S. Army Medical Research Unit, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Ganglion cell response characteristics from the area centralis in the intact eye of the cat (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Roy H. Steinberg, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Growth of Staphylococcus aureus in a null magnetic field environment (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1970., 1970), also by Dietrich E. Beischer, Glenda S. Cowart, United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and iomedical Research Program (U.S.) (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): A head restraint device for vestibular studies (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by W. Carroll Hixson, Charles A. Lowery, Jorma I. Niven, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Histological study of spontaneous ear infections in albino rats (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Makoto Igarashi, Albert E. New, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The influence of alcohol and dramamine, alone and in combination, on psychomotor performance (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Pei Chin Tang, Róbert Rosenstein, U.S. Army Medical Research Unit, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Influence of contact cues on the perception of the oculogravic illusion (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Brant Clark, Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The influence of selected factors on shrinkage and overfit in multiple correlation (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory, U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1971., 1971), also by Norman Edward Lane and Naval Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory (U.S.) (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Influence of vestibular stimulation and display luminance on the performance of a compensatory tracking task (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1970., 1970), also by Richard D. Gilson, Fred E. Guedry, Alan J. Benson, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Instrumentation for measurement of vestibular-significant forces in helicopters (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by W. Carroll Hixson, Jorma I. Niven, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Instrumentation for the Coriolis Acceleration Platform (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by W. Carroll Hixson, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The inversion illusion in parabolic flight: its probable dependence on otolith function (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Ashton Graybiel, Robert S. Kellogg, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology, and United States Air Force (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Isoniazid prophylaxis as an aviation risk : preliminary report (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by William W. Simmons, Rosalie K. Ambler, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Kinematics nomenclature for physiological accelerations with special reference to vestibular applications (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by W. Carroll Hixson, Manning J. Correia, and Jorma I. Niven (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Labyrinthine defects as shown by ataxia and caloric tests (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Alfred R. Fregly, Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Lack of response to thermal stimulation of the semicircular canals in the weightlessness phase of parabolic flight (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Robert S. Kellogg, Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology, and United States Air Force (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Linear energy transfer spectra and dose equivalents of galactic radiation exposure in space (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Hermann J. Schaefer, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Magnitude estimation of visual velocity (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1970., 1970), also by Robert S. Kennedy, G. Richard Wendt, Melvin D. Yessenow, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Magnitude estimations of coriolis sensations (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by James T. Reason, Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Major orientation-error accidents in regular army UH-1 aircraft during fiscal year 1967 : accident factors (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory, Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace and Regional Medical Center, 1970., 1970), also by W. Carroll Hixson, Emil Spezia, Jorma I. Niven, Naval Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory (U.S.), and U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Manikin measurements of the noise attenuation provided by flight helmets (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by John R. Forstall, United States. Naval Air Systems Command, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Measurement of left circumflex coronary flow, cardiac output, and central aortic pressure in the unmedicated greyhound dog (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by LeRoy S. Wirthlin, E. Peter Beck, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Modification of vestibular responses as a function of rate of rotation about an earth-horizontal axis (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Manning J. Correia, Alfred R. Fregly, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Modification of vestibular sensitivity in the rat (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1965., 1965), also by David C. Riccio, Arnold Eskin, Makoto Igarashi, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Morale as a function of self-definition and stage of training (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by George M. Rickus, Rosalie K. Ambler, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Morale level as a function of the subject's own definition of morale (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Rosalie K. Ambler, Everett R. Burnett, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Motion sickness precipitated in the weightless phase of parabolic flight by coriolis accelerations (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Ashton Graybiel, Robert S. Kellogg, Robert S. Kennedy, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (Ohio), United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Motion sickness produced by head movement as a function of rotational velocity (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1970., 1970), also by Earl F. Miller, Ashton Graybiel, Manned Spacecraft Center (U.S.), United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Motion sickness susceptibility under weightless and hypergravity conditions generated by parabolic flight (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Earl F. Miller, Robert D. O'Donnell, Robert S. Kellogg, Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (Ohio) (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Naval aviation training (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Lawrence K. Waters, Rosalie K. Ambler, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The naval aviator's speech discrimination test : instrumentation and technique (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by James W. Greene and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Naval flight officer student prediction system (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Richard F. Booth, Floyd E. Peterson, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Naval flight officer student prediction system (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Richard F. Booth, Rosalie K. Ambler, George M. Rickus, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): A note on the dosimetric interpretation of rigidity spectra for solar particle beams (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Hermann J. Schaefer, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): A note on the galactic radiation exposure in geomagnetically unprotected regions of space (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Hermann J. Schaefer, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Nuclear emulsion measurements of the astronauts' radiation exposure on Apollo VII (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Hermann J. Schaefer, Jeremiah J. Sullivan, Manned Spacecraft Center (U.S.), United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Nuclear emulsion recordings of heavy primaries on Apollo VII and VIII (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Hermann J. Schaefer, Jeremiah J. Sullivan, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and Manned Spacecraft Center (U.S.) (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Off-vertical rotation: a convenient precise means of exposing the passive human subject to a rotating linear acceleration vector (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Ashton Graybiel, Earl F. Miller, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology, and Manned Spacecraft Center (U.S.) (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Optimal weighting of course grades for two naval air training schools (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Richard F. Booth and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Orientation-error accidents in regular army aircraft during fiscal year 1967 : relative incidence and cost (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory, Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace and Regional Medical Center, 1970., 1970), also by W. Carroll Hixson, Emil Spezia, Jorma I. Niven, Naval Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory (U.S.), and U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Orientation-error accidents in regular army uh-1 aircraft during fiscal year 1967 : relative incidence and cost (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory, Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace and Regional Medical Center, 1970., 1970), also by W. Carroll Hixson, Emil Spezia, Jorma I. Niven, Naval Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory (U.S.), and U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Practical and theoretical implications based on long-term follow-up of Meniere's patients treated with streptomycin sulfate (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1965., 1965), also by Ashton Graybiel, Michael E. McLeod, Earl F Miller, Alfred R. Fregly, Harold F. Schuknecht, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology, and Massachusetts General Hospital (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Predicting success in naval flight officer training (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Floyd E. Peterson, Rosalie K. Ambler, Norman E. Lane, Richard F. Booth, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Preliminary report on a test of mechanical comprehension (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1970., 1970), also by John T. Evans and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Prevention of overt motion sickness by incremental exposure to otherwise highly stressful coriolis accelerations (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Ashton Graybiel, James K. Colehour, F. Robert Deane, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Progressive adaptation to coriolis accelerations associated with 1-rpm increments in the velocity of the slow rotation room (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by James T. Reason, Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Psychomotor functions, the body image, and aviation (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, Roger F. Reinhardt, and Gary J. Tucker (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Public health aspects of galactic radiation exposure in supersonic transport (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Hermann J. Schaefer, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Radiation measurements at supersonic transport altitude with balloon-borne nuclear emulsions (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Hermann J. Schaefer, Langley Research Center, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Radiation monitoring with nuclear emulsions on Project Gemini. I, Experimental design and evaluation procedures: Partial results on Missions 4 and 5 (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Hermann J. Schaefer, Jeremiah J. Sullivan, United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and Manned Spacecraft Center (U.S.) (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Radiation monitoring with nuclear emulsions on Project Gemini. II, Results on the 14-day mission Gemini VII (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Hermann J. Schaefer, Jeremiah J. Sullivan, United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and Manned Spacecraft Center (U.S.) (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Radiation monitoring with nuclear emulsions on Project Gemini. III, The flux of galactic heavy primaries on Gemini VII (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Hermann J. Schaefer, Jeremiah J. Sullivan, United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and Manned Spacecraft Center (U.S.) (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Rapid vestibular adaptation in a rotating environment by means of controlled head movements (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Ashton Graybiel, Charles D. Wood, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): A refined thermodilution cardiac output catheter (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Hassan H. Khalil and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The relationship between habituation to vestibular stimulation and vigilance: individual differences and subsidiary problems (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory, U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1972., 1972), also by R. S. Kennedy and Naval Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory (U.S.) (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The relationship of college major to success in naval aviation training (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, Norman E. Lane, and Floyd E. Peterson (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The relationship of five personality scales to success in naval aviation training (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Howard L. Fleischman, Norman E. Lane, Floyd E. Peterson, Rosalie K. Ambler, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The relationship of the Edwards Personal Preference Schedule to success in naval flight training (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1965., 1965), also by Floyd E. Peterson, Robert S. Kennedy, and Norman E. Lane (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The relationship of the naval aviator's speech discrimination test to the pure tone audiogram (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by James W. Greene, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. Naval Air Systems Command (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The relationship of the Objectively Scoreable Apperception Test (OAT) to success in naval aviation training (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Ronald M. Bale, Lewis E. Waldeisen, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Relationships among inventoried self-rated and peer-rated interpersonal values (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Lawrence K. Waters and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Repeated or continual measurements of cardiac output in the squirrel monkey (Saimiri sciureus) by thermodilution (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Hassan H. Khalil and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The rod after-effect in s-potentials from cat retina (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Roy H. Steinberg, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Rod and cone contributions to s-potentials from cat retina (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Roy H. Steinberg, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Rod-cone interaction in s-potentials from cat retina (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Roy H. Steinberg, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Sample helicopter flight motion data for vestibular reference (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by W. Carroll Hixson, Jorma I. Niven, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Screening of squirrel monkeys (Saimiri sciureus) for vestibular function studies (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Makoto Igarashi, F. Robert Deane, Ashton Graybiel, United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Sea urchin mitosis in high magnetic fields (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Vernon R. Reno, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The semiautomated test system: a tool for standardized performance testing (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by H. Rudy Ramsey, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Serial electrocardiograms : their reliability and prognostic validity over a 24-year period (Pensacola, Florida.: Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by William R. Harlan, Robert E Mitchell, Robert K Osborne, Ashton Graybiel, Albert Oberman, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and United States Public Health Service (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): A simple method for percutaneous introduction of cardiac catheters (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Hassan H. Khalil and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): A sixty-minute vigilance task with 100 scoreable responses (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Robert S. Kennedy and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The somatic chromosomes of the mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus) (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Steven P. Pakes, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States. Office of Space Science and Applications, and United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Some secondary determiners of psychological stress (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966/., 1966), also by Patrick M. Curran, Robert J. Wherry, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Stability of Edwards Personal Preference Schedule need scale scores and profiles over a seven-week interval (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Lawrence K. Waters and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): A standard technique for temporal bone preparation (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Makoto Igarashi (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): A standardized laboratory means of determining susceptibility to coriolis (motion) sickness (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Earl F. Miller, Ashton Graybiel, Manned Spacecraft Center (U.S.), United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Structural elements in the concept of motion sickness (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Studies on the response to acute altitude exposure with special reference to the possibility of early detection of high altitude pulmonary edema (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Hugh S. Pratt, Ashton Graybiel, LeRoy S. Wirthlin, E. Peter Beck, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): A study of blood pH, serum potassium concentration, and stress in the squirrel monkey (Saimiri sciureus) (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Thomas E. Wheeler, Albert E. New, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): A study of the ballistocardiographic test-retest reliability (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by David H. Jackson, Robert J. Wherry, Norman E. Lane, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Suicide attempts (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Gary J. Tucker, Roger F. Reinhardt, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Susceptibility to acute motion sickness in blind persons (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1970., 1970), also by Ashton Graybiel, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology, and Manned Spacecraft Center (U.S.) (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Thousand aviator study : nonvestibular contributions to postural equilibrium functions (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Alfred R. Fregly, Robert E. Mitchell, Ashton Graybiel, Albert Oberman, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology, and United States Public Health Service (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The thousand aviator study : smoking history correlates of selected physiological, biochemical, and anthropometric measures (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Norman E. Lane, Ashton Graybiel, Robert E. Mitchell, Albert Oberman, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and United States Public Health Service (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): A torque motor servorotator for vestibular application (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by W. Carroll Hixson, Jorma I. Niven, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Transfer of habituation of motion sickness on change in body position between vertical and horizontal in a rotating environment (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Ashton Graybiel, Edward L. Ricks, James K. Colehour, Alfred R. Fregly, F. Robert Deane, Allen B. Thompson, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Trends in systolic blood pressure in the thousand aviator cohort over a 24-year period (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Albert Oberman, Robert E Mitchell, Ashton Graybiel, William R. Harlan, Norman E. Lane, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and United States Public Health Service (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): A triaxial accelerometer module for vestibular application (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by W. Carroll Hixson, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Two devices for analysis of nystagmus (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Fred E. Guedry, Gene T. Turnipseed, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Two procedures for applied and experimental studies of stress (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1970., 1970), also by Robert S. Kennedy, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): The validity of a Brief Vestibular Disorientation Test in screening pilot trainees (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1965., 1965), also by Rosalie K. Ambler, Fred E. Guedry, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Life Sciences (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Vectorcardiogram and aortic blood flow of squirrel monkeys (Saimiri sciureus) in a strong superconductive electromagnet (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1968., 1968), also by Dietrich E. Beischer, United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Vectorcardiographic changes during intracoronary injections (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Raphael F. Smith, Charles A. Sanders, J. Warren Harthorne, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, United States. Manned Spacedraft Center, and United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): A venting alarm system for cryogenic liquids (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Efrain A. Molina, Vernon R. Reno, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Vestibular reactions in cat and man during and after angular acceleration. [Part] I, Responses from the lateral and the vertical canals to two stimulus durations (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by William Edward Collins, Fred E. Guedry, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Vestibular reactions in cat and man during and after angular accelerations. [Part] 2, Responses to lateral canal stimuli of various accelerations (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1967., 1967), also by Fred E. Guedry, William Edward Collins, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Vestibular responses to sinusoidal angular acceleration stimuli with superimposed offset velocities (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1969., 1969), also by Jorma I. Niven, W. Carroll Hixson, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Visual distortion : a point of view (Pensacola, Florida : U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, U.S. Naval Aviation Medical Center, 1970., 1970), also by R. S. Kennedy (page images at HathiTrust) Naval Aerospace Medical Institute (U.S.): Visual horizontal perception in relation to otolith function (Pensacola, Florida : Naval Aerospace Medical Institute, Naval Aerospace Medical Center, 1966., 1966), also by Earl F. Miller, Ashton Graybiel, Alfred R. Fregly, United States Navy Department Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Advanced Research and Technology (page images at HathiTrust)
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