I bought one of these several months ago when I was having a lot of trouble with motion sickness while driving. It works for me-just a slight tingle in the palm of the hand, no nausea. Next summer I'll try to go boating for the first time in years.
Reliefband 2.0 Relieves AR/VR-induced Motion Sickness
According to Reliefband:
Motion sickness occurs when there is a “sensory conflict” between what the eyes and ears are telling the brain. A conflict occurs when visual inputs report little movement while the balance organ, located in the middle ear, sends signals indicating the body is in motion. With Virtual Reality, this scenario is reversed. The brain has a built-in safety mechanism that interprets this “sensory conflict” as a sign that the body has been poisoned and instructs the stomach to throw up.
The Reliefband 2.0 applies the company's patented Neurowave technology that "creates accurately programmed pulses with highly specific waveforms, frequency and intensity to modulate the median nerve on the underside of the wrist. This precise activity (technically referred to as “neuromodulation”) uses the body’s natural neural pathways to block the waves of nausea produced by the stomach."
The new model includes a "J-shaped smart band" that makes it easy to put on your wrist and comfortable to wear over long periods of existing in alternate realities; has a "stunning design" that makes it wearable in "any social setting"—although, in AR and VR, no one cares what you're really wearing; includes hypoallergenic 31L Surgical Steel contacts; contains an intuitive display with 10 intensity settings; and has a built-in battery with approximately 17 hours of life on the mid-intensity level.
Reliefband 2.0 is expected to be available at the end of January, 2018 for $174.99.
Game on!
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