| Literature DB >> 33953237 |
Endre Takács1,2,3, Irén Barkaszi1, István Czigler1,2, Lívia Gabriella Pató1, Anna Altbäcker1, Joseph McIntyre4,5,6, Guy Cheron7,8, László Balázs9.
Abstract
Although human adaptation to spaceflight has been studied for decades, little is known about its long-term effects on brain and behavior. The present study investigated visuospatial performance and associated electrophysiological responses in astronauts before, during, and after an approximately half-year long mission to the International Space Station. Here we report findings demonstrating that cognitive performance can suffer marked decrements during spaceflight. Astronauts were slower and more error-prone on orbit than on Earth, while event-related brain potentials reflected diminished attentional resources. Our study is the first to provide evidence for impaired performance during both the initial (~ 8 days) and later (~ 50 days) stages of spaceflight, without any signs of adaptation. Results indicate restricted adaptability to spaceflight conditions and calls for new research prior to deep space explorations.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33953237 PMCID: PMC8100295 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-88938-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic timeline of study design and the two tasks. (A) Schedule of data collection. (B) During pre-flight and post-flight, participants performed the experimental tasks in a seated position, watching a computer screen through a facemask attached to a cylindrical tube. On orbit, subjects performed the experiment in a quasi free-floating posture, holding on to the tunnel-computer complex that floated with the subject with the facemask held securely to the head with a strap. (C) Stimulus presentation in the Lines task. Participants had to indicate whether two successively presented lines (Reference and Probe stimuli) had the same orientation. 20% of the Probe stimuli were replaced by a task-irrelevant picture (Irrelevant stimulus). (D) Stimulus presentation in the Clock task. Participants had to indicate whether the spatial location of a dot (Probe stimulus) matched the clock time represented by a digit (Reference stimulus). Half of the trials were presented in a square frame (Frame condition, shown below), while the other half were presented inside a circular border (NoFrame condition, shown above). The square frame served to provide an oriented visual reference, as the circular tunnel excluded all external visual cues.
Figure 2Task performance in the Lines and the Clock task. (A) Mean reaction times (corrected for practice effect). Reaction times were significantly slower during space travel compared to pre-flight. Reactions remained slower during early post-flight, but returned to pre-flight levels for late post-flight sessions. (B) Mean task accuracy. Accuracy decreased in space in the Clock task. Despite the similar trend, accuracy in the Lines task remained unchanged in space. Accuracy returned to pre-flight levels for late post-flight sessions in both tasks. Error bars represent within-subjects standard error of mean (SEM)[23]. *P < 0.05.
Figure 3Event-related potentials in the Lines and the Clock task. (A) Grand mean ERP elicited by Irrelevant stimuli, presented on the Cz electrode. (B) Scalp distribution of P3a component, measured at peak latency (384.8 ms in both tasks). (C) Grand mean ERP elicited by Probe stimuli, presented on the CPz electrode. (D) Scalp distribution of P3b component, measured at peak latency (468.7 ms for the Lines, and 568.4 for the Clock task). (E) Amplitude of P3a and P3b elicited by Irrelevant and Probe stimuli, respectively, averaged over electrodes. P3a and P3b amplitudes showed similar spaceflight related alterations, as both components decreased significantly during in-flight compared to pre-flight. No differences were present between the two in-flight sessions. Compared to pre-flight, amplitudes remained decreased throughout the post-flight period. Error bars represent within-subjects SEM[22]. **p < 0.01; *p < 0.05.