Definition
A set of in-flight or simulator exercises designed to deliberately produce sensory illusions in a pilot so they can experience firsthand how unreliable the body's balance and motion senses become without outside visual references. The exercises typically include maneuvers such as climbs and descents while turning, sudden head movements during turns, and recovery from unusual attitudes, each chosen to provoke a specific vestibular illusion under controlled conditions.
Plain English
A training exercise where an instructor intentionally tricks the pilot's sense of balance during flight, so the pilot can feel how easily the body lies about which way is up when there is nothing to see outside.
Context Anchor
Seen in instrument training and in the Instrument Flying Handbook discussion of why pilots must trust flight instruments when they cannot clearly see the natural horizon.
Derivation
Demonstration comes from a Latin word meaning “to point out” or “show.” Spatial relates to space or position. Disorientation means losing the correct sense of direction or position. Together, the phrase means an exercise that shows a pilot how the body can lose its correct sense of position in space.
Why Pilots Care
Pilots who have felt disorientation firsthand learn to ignore body sensations and rely on instruments when visibility is lost.
Grounding Statement
In a safe training setting, the pilot may feel the airplane is level while the instruments show that it is actually turning or changing pitch.
Intuition Check
Do not assume spatial disorientation feels like obvious confusion. It can feel like certainty, even when the instruments show that the feeling is wrong.
Example Sentence 1
During the demonstration of spatial disorientation, the instructor had the student close their eyes while the aircraft entered a gentle turn, then asked them to identify the direction of bank.
Example Sentence 2
After completing the demonstration of spatial disorientation the student reported a much stronger trust in the attitude indicator.