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, How Three Little Canals in Each t of Our Ears Keep Us Balanced and Cause Airmen to Fall by Making Them Believe They Are Still Moving in a Certain. Direction When Really They Are Not THE mystery of many tragic accidents to aviators resulting from inexplic able failure of the flying men to control their machines at critical mo ments has now been cleared up by medi cal science. On each side of our heads, within the middle ear. ck>selv connected with the apparatus of hearing, there is a curious little series of three hollow loops or membranes. These are called the semi circular canals because of their shape and also because they are filled with liquid. In these canals is our sense of balance. On them depends our ability to keep erect or to sway against external movements and to transmit the sensation of balance or our direction in space to our brains It is through the functioning of these canals that we are able, for instance, to "brace ourselves" when a train in which we are standing strikes a curve, for with .out them we would have no sensation of being |t an uncomfortable angle. The ^emi-circular canals are, in fact, the spirit levels of the body, and it is by the impressions they send to the brain that the motor centres send instructions to the proper groups of muscles to keep the body in proper Equilibrium against the force of gravity. It is the proper functioning of these spirit levels in the aviator's ears that en ables him to control the delicately bal anced machine in which he flies and the conduct of which is so dependent upon the delicacy and trneness of perception of its changes in angle by its driver. V Hew tn Aeroplane Make* u "Nose Dive," Illustrating the Abnormal Positions of the Aviator During the Process, W hich Are Registered by the Semi Circular Canals in the Aviator's Ears, and Whose Safety Depends Solely Upon Their Accurate Functioning. ?lo When the spirit levels of the semi-cir cular canals fail to respond promptly or are misled into thinking?if it can be said that organs really think, and some scientists believe that they do?that the ? flying machine has a movement or an angle different from what it really has that disaster occurs to the pilot. How is this centre of our sense of Ifalance misled? That question is answered by Dr. Lewis Fisher, major, and Dr. H W. Lyman, cap tain in the Medical Corps of the United States army. Both of these scientists have long been on duty at the great avia tion camp at Mineola, Long Island, and have had the best opportunity for obser vation possible. They give the results of these observations in the Journal of the American Medical Association. ' The semi-cirdular canals are filled with a liquid called endolymph, and in this endolymph float a great number of almost microscopically small hard bodies called otoliths, literally ear stones. The canals and the bulb to which they are attached are close beside, indeed, almost a part of, the actual centre of hearing in the ear, which is a shell-like body called the coch lea. The two together are termed the bony labyrinth of the ear* There is one, of course, in each ear. But although so close together the functions of the semi circular canals and the cochlea are en tirely separate. The reactions to sound of the cochlea are carried through the auditory nerve to the brain, but the reactions to gravitation or direction in space of the body possess ing It is not carried through this same nerve by the canals. Science, indeed, has not yet discovered just how the impres sions do go- from the canals to the brain, but however transmitted they are trans mitted very thoroughly. Vertigo, with its nausea and other unpleasant symptoms, is caused by the functioning of these canals probably more than by any other factor. It appears that when the head is turned or bent a movement is set up in the liquid within the semi-circular canals which is transmitted to the otoliths. It is supposed that these otoliths swinging against the sides of the canals touch upon the nerves there and communicate the sensation of movement through them to the brain. When one is whirled about suddenly and violently or for any. length of time the movements of the lymph and otoliths con tinue in the ears in the same direction in which they have been proceeding. When this happens we have exactly the same sensation of movement that we have been experiencing, although at the time all movement has ceased. This is why after a long rock in a rocking chair one gets up and feels as though she were still rocking. It also explains why people who have had long, rough sea voyages for some consid erable time afterward experience the sen sation of walking on an unstable earth. All this is due to the fact that the liquid and little stones in the canals have not yet quieted down. And in the violent movements which aviators must experience, especially in "stunt flying," this is doubly true. Here, say Drs. Fisher and Lyman, is ihe explanation of the mysterious falls. The air pilot is moving at a terrific speed; fractions of minutes, . and even fractions of sec The Three Angle* of Movement Through Which the Head of the Aviator Paste*. First, the Frontal Motion; Second, the Horizontal; Third, the Sagittal, or from Back to Front Movement. The Semi-Circular Canals in Which Rests Our Balancing Sense. A Is the Superior, B the Posterior and C the Hori zontal Loop. Each of These and Their Bulb, D, Is Filled With a Fluid and Almost Microscopic Hard Particles That Give the Brain Percep tion of the Body's Angle. onds, are as important to him as hours are to people walking on solid earth. Coming out of some violent evolution the movement in the s-pirlt levels persists, his brain becomes confused, he mis judges angles and posi tion, grasps the wrong control and crashes to earfh and death. By vizualizing the posi tion of the pilot as he is whirled in the various stunt evolutions, it was found that by reproducing a similar whirling in a chair balanced on subjective effects of the actual stunt. Established facts or principles, the doc tors wrote, are the following: "1. In each ear we have three semicircu lar tubes, or canals, containing fluid, so placed that they are at right angles with one another. Because of this arrangement, no change of position of the individual is possible without producing some move ment of fluid in one or more of the canals. Movement of the fluid in these canals. Bends messages to the brain, which are there interpreted as body movement. Hence, the ears constitute the motion sensing organs of the body. "2. When an individual is whirled, be it Diagram Showing How the Laboratory Chair Is Used to Simulate the Movements of What Is Known Among Aviators as the "Tight Spiral." The absence of such an essent:al organ as a motion-perceiving apparatus is too great a handicap to the man travelling in an 'air medium' to Justify him even in think ing for a moment that he could dispense with it for the sole benefit of vertigo im munity, especially since the normal indi vidual can acquire such an immunity with out much difficulty. "There are three cardinal angles or po sitions or vertigo, it seems?horizontal, frontal and sagittal. These angles are il lustrated by the diagram of the three heads at the bottom of this page. "The greatest usefulness of the knowl edge that 'stunting' is an ear problem lies in the fact that the flier may be educated to disregard the vertigo effects of his in-the laboratory or in an aeroplane, there a'stunts' in the laboratory, instead of among is produced a circulation of this fluid in certain definite canals and planes. Now, if the turning is suddenly altered or stopped, or if the aeroplane comes out of a rotating manoeuvre, the fluid in the canals con tinues to move in its former plane by sheer force of its momentum. The circulation of the fluid by momentum is interpreted by the brain as body movement; but not being in accordance with fact, the body having ceased to revolve, it constitutes vertigo or dizziness, and is disturbing to the indi vidual. "Labyrinthine vertigo, therefore, is a false sensation of motion similar to the visual illusion of motion observed when one is watching a moving train from the window of a stationary coach, both being unavoidable phenomena of normal special sense mechanisms which, however, the subject easily learns to disregard. "One must not fall into the error, how ever, of thinking that the lack of a normal ear mechanism would be advantageous to the flier, because of the immunity to ver tigo which this condition would confer. tke clouds, and without danger acquire a tolerance to evolutions to a degree impos sible in the air. This can be accomplished by the use of an otologic apparatus known as the 'orientator.' In its construction it is like the cockpit of an aeroplane sus pended in-concentric rings, after the man ner of a ship's compass. The movements ?or changes of position?which are pos sible in all directions except actual for ward progression, are governed by the in dividual seated in the machine, using a set of controls resembling those of an aeroplane." The Mechanism of "the Loop," Showing the Various S gittal Positions of the Head the Flyer Assumes. The Spinning Nose Dive, in Which the Aviator's Head Is Whirled Both Vertical and Horizontally. "?< 14 Copjrifciit, l?ia, by Star Company Ureut Britain Hlghts Reserv.-d