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Psychological and Behavioral Changes during Confinement in a 520-Day Simulated Interplanetary Mission to Mars

Behavioral health risks are among the most serious and difficult to mitigate risks of confinement in space craft during long-duration space exploration missions. We report on behavioral and psychological reactions of a multinational crew of 6 healthy males confined in a 550 m(3) chamber for 520 days...

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Autores principales: Basner, Mathias, Dinges, David F., Mollicone, Daniel J., Savelev, Igor, Ecker, Adrian J., Di Antonio, Adrian, Jones, Christopher W., Hyder, Eric C., Kan, Kevin, Morukov, Boris V., Sutton, Jeffrey P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3968121/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24675720
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0093298
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author Basner, Mathias
Dinges, David F.
Mollicone, Daniel J.
Savelev, Igor
Ecker, Adrian J.
Di Antonio, Adrian
Jones, Christopher W.
Hyder, Eric C.
Kan, Kevin
Morukov, Boris V.
Sutton, Jeffrey P.
author_facet Basner, Mathias
Dinges, David F.
Mollicone, Daniel J.
Savelev, Igor
Ecker, Adrian J.
Di Antonio, Adrian
Jones, Christopher W.
Hyder, Eric C.
Kan, Kevin
Morukov, Boris V.
Sutton, Jeffrey P.
author_sort Basner, Mathias
collection PubMed
description Behavioral health risks are among the most serious and difficult to mitigate risks of confinement in space craft during long-duration space exploration missions. We report on behavioral and psychological reactions of a multinational crew of 6 healthy males confined in a 550 m(3) chamber for 520 days during the first Earth-based, high-fidelity simulated mission to Mars. Rest-activity of crewmembers was objectively measured throughout the mission with wrist-worn actigraphs. Once weekly throughout the mission crewmembers completed the Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II), Profile of Moods State short form (POMS), conflict questionnaire, the Psychomotor Vigilance Test (PVT-B), and series of visual analogue scales on stress and fatigue. We observed substantial inter-individual differences in the behavioral responses of crewmembers to the prolonged mission confinement and isolation. The crewmember with the highest average POMS total mood disturbance score throughout the mission also reported symptoms of depression in 93% of mission weeks, which reached mild-to-moderate levels in >10% of mission weeks. Conflicts with mission control were reported five times more often than conflicts among crewmembers. Two crewmembers who had the highest ratings of stress and physical exhaustion accounted for 85% of the perceived conflicts. One of them developed a persistent sleep onset insomnia with ratings of poor sleep quality, which resulted in chronic partial sleep deprivation, elevated ratings of daytime tiredness, and frequent deficits in behavioral alertness. Sleep-wake timing was altered in two other crewmembers, beginning in the first few months of the mission and persisting throughout. Two crewmembers showed neither behavioral disturbances nor reports of psychological distress during the 17-month period of mission confinement. These results highlight the importance of identifying behavioral, psychological, and biological markers of characteristics that predispose prospective crewmembers to both effective and ineffective behavioral reactions during the confinement of prolonged spaceflight, to inform crew selection, training, and individualized countermeasures.
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spelling pubmed-39681212014-04-01 Psychological and Behavioral Changes during Confinement in a 520-Day Simulated Interplanetary Mission to Mars Basner, Mathias Dinges, David F. Mollicone, Daniel J. Savelev, Igor Ecker, Adrian J. Di Antonio, Adrian Jones, Christopher W. Hyder, Eric C. Kan, Kevin Morukov, Boris V. Sutton, Jeffrey P. PLoS One Research Article Behavioral health risks are among the most serious and difficult to mitigate risks of confinement in space craft during long-duration space exploration missions. We report on behavioral and psychological reactions of a multinational crew of 6 healthy males confined in a 550 m(3) chamber for 520 days during the first Earth-based, high-fidelity simulated mission to Mars. Rest-activity of crewmembers was objectively measured throughout the mission with wrist-worn actigraphs. Once weekly throughout the mission crewmembers completed the Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II), Profile of Moods State short form (POMS), conflict questionnaire, the Psychomotor Vigilance Test (PVT-B), and series of visual analogue scales on stress and fatigue. We observed substantial inter-individual differences in the behavioral responses of crewmembers to the prolonged mission confinement and isolation. The crewmember with the highest average POMS total mood disturbance score throughout the mission also reported symptoms of depression in 93% of mission weeks, which reached mild-to-moderate levels in >10% of mission weeks. Conflicts with mission control were reported five times more often than conflicts among crewmembers. Two crewmembers who had the highest ratings of stress and physical exhaustion accounted for 85% of the perceived conflicts. One of them developed a persistent sleep onset insomnia with ratings of poor sleep quality, which resulted in chronic partial sleep deprivation, elevated ratings of daytime tiredness, and frequent deficits in behavioral alertness. Sleep-wake timing was altered in two other crewmembers, beginning in the first few months of the mission and persisting throughout. Two crewmembers showed neither behavioral disturbances nor reports of psychological distress during the 17-month period of mission confinement. These results highlight the importance of identifying behavioral, psychological, and biological markers of characteristics that predispose prospective crewmembers to both effective and ineffective behavioral reactions during the confinement of prolonged spaceflight, to inform crew selection, training, and individualized countermeasures. Public Library of Science 2014-03-27 /pmc/articles/PMC3968121/ /pubmed/24675720 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0093298 Text en © 2014 Basner et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Basner, Mathias
Dinges, David F.
Mollicone, Daniel J.
Savelev, Igor
Ecker, Adrian J.
Di Antonio, Adrian
Jones, Christopher W.
Hyder, Eric C.
Kan, Kevin
Morukov, Boris V.
Sutton, Jeffrey P.
Psychological and Behavioral Changes during Confinement in a 520-Day Simulated Interplanetary Mission to Mars
title Psychological and Behavioral Changes during Confinement in a 520-Day Simulated Interplanetary Mission to Mars
title_full Psychological and Behavioral Changes during Confinement in a 520-Day Simulated Interplanetary Mission to Mars
title_fullStr Psychological and Behavioral Changes during Confinement in a 520-Day Simulated Interplanetary Mission to Mars
title_full_unstemmed Psychological and Behavioral Changes during Confinement in a 520-Day Simulated Interplanetary Mission to Mars
title_short Psychological and Behavioral Changes during Confinement in a 520-Day Simulated Interplanetary Mission to Mars
title_sort psychological and behavioral changes during confinement in a 520-day simulated interplanetary mission to mars
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3968121/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24675720
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0093298
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