It doesn't, i find reading whilst moving helps to stop it as your taking your mind off it.
Yes it does. The reason it causes dizziness is because hypertension is high BP and the blood is moving around the body real fast and there is more blood going into the brain
Yes, motion sickness can result from a disconnect between what the eyes see and what the vestibular system senses. When there is a mismatch between visual and vestibular inputs, such as when reading in a moving vehicle, it can lead to symptoms like nausea and dizziness.
the first person to die in a car accident was Bridget Driscoll who walked into the path of a veichle that was moving at 6.4 km/h in London on 17th august 1896.
What causes an electric current to keep moving is a steady supply of electrons.
Force is the only thing that causes the accelerationof material objects, whether they're moving or not.
you mussles dont move long and sece they are ussually moving they get dizzy
You stir the paddles and the wheel start moving.
Meg Cabot's Moving Day is worth 6 AR points. The reading level is 5.0. There is a reading practice and a vocabulary test.
An object keeps moving once an applied force causes it to start moving because of inertia, which is the tendency of an object to resist changes in its motion.
No, Changing rhymes with ranging and moving rhymes with grooving. Moving-grooving, changing-ranging, fighting-writing, reading-bleeding...
Wind moving sand causes dunes, both in the desert and at the beach.
Vertigo is a specific type of dizziness characterized by a sensation of spinning or movement when not actually moving. Dizziness is a more general term that encompasses a range of sensations such as lightheadedness, unsteadiness, and feeling off balance.