This illustration shows the configuration for
conducting neurocognitive assessments for the Neuromapping study aboard
the International Space Station.
Credit: Credits: NASA
In space, there is no "up" or "down." That
can mess with the human brain and affect the way people move and think
in space. An investigation on the International Space Station seeks to
understand how the brain changes in space and ways to deal with those
changes.
Previous research and first-hand reports suggest that humans have a
harder time controlling physical movement and completing mental tasks in
microgravity. Astronauts have experienced problems with balance and
perceptual illusions -- feeling as if, for example, they are switching
back and forth between right-side-up and upside down.
The Spaceflight Effects on Neurocognitive Performance: Extent,
Longevity, and Neural Bases (NeuroMapping) study is examining changes in
both brain structure and function and determining how long it takes to
recover after returning from space.
Researchers are using both behavioral assessments and brain imaging.
Astronauts complete timed obstacle courses and tests of their spatial
memory, or the ability to mentally picture and manipulate a
three-dimensional shape, before and after spaceflight. The spatial
memory test also is performed aboard the station, along with sensory
motor adaptation tests and computerized exercises requiring them to move
and think simultaneously. Astronauts are tested shortly after arriving
aboard the station, mid-way through and near the end of a six-month
flight.
Structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans of the brain are done pre-flight and post-flight.
"We are looking at the volume of different structures in the brain
and whether they change in size or shape during spaceflight," said
principal investigator Rachael D. Seidler, director of the University of
Michigan's Neuromotor Behavior Laboratory.
Functional MRIs involve astronauts completing a task during the
imaging, which will show researchers which parts of the brain they rely
on to do so.
According to Seidler, both the behavioral assessment and brain
imaging are important to help identify the relationship between physical
changes in the brain and those in behavior.
"On Earth, your vestibular -- or balance -- system tells you how your
head moves relative to gravity, but in space, the gravity reference is
gone," Seidler said. "That causes these perceptual illusions, as well as
difficulty coordinating movement of the eyes and head."
These difficulties could have serious consequences for astronauts,
especially when changing between gravitational environments, such as
landing on Mars. In those cases, astronauts will need to be able to
perform tasks such as using tools and driving a rover, and they must be
capable of escape in a landing emergency.
Identifying the physical mechanisms behind changes in behavior and
how much time it takes to adapt will help researchers determine how best
to help space explorers compensate. The study results could also reveal
whether astronauts return to "normal" post-flight because the brain
changes back, or if the brain instead learns to compensate for the
changes that happened in space.
Scientists know that brain changes and adaptations happen here on
Earth as well. As people age, for example, they use more brain networks
than a younger person does to perform the same task. Chemotherapy,
injury and illness also can trigger such adaptation. Co-investigator
Patricia A. Reuter-Lorenz, chair of psychology at the University of
Michigan, said a major benefit of this study is that the subjects are
fit, healthy astronauts. That will make it possible to apply the
findings across a range of causes.
Learning more about how the human brain changes in space will help
scientists better understand the ways it can recover and adapt in space,
and on Earth.
At least here on Earth, people can usually tell which way is up.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
NASA/Johnson Space Center.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.