Neurophysiological and Cognitive Changes Induced by the Acute Head-Down Tilt, 2025, Sharma et al.

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  1. SNT Gatchaman

    SNT Gatchaman Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Neurophysiological and Cognitive Changes Induced by the Acute Head-Down Tilt
    Monika Sharma; Savita Gaur; Harsh Pawar; Neha Yadav: Bhanuteja Thondala; Sanjeev Kumar; Krishna Kishore; Koushik Ray; Usha Panjwani

    INTRODUCTION
    In space, under weightlessness conditions, human brain activity is changed due to the shifting of body fluid and blood toward the cephalic region. This shifting leads to changes in cerebral hemodynamics and, consequently, neurophysiological function, which impacts mental functions like cognition and decision-making capabilities of space travelers. The present study reports the effect of acute exposure to simulated microgravity on cognitive functions and event-related potentials.

    METHODS
    There were 18 healthy human subjects who participated in a 1-h 6° head-down tilt (HDT) bed rest to simulate physiological conditions during microgravity. Subjects were instructed to perform event-related potential tasks and cognitive tasks with a simulator sickness questionnaire to evaluate their performance, attention, and alertness during weightlessness, at baseline, after microgravity exposure, and after a recovery of 30 min.

    RESULTS
    A significant change was found in the latency of P300 as compared to the baseline. The amplitude of the P300 wave was changed during HDT. The mean reaction time of contingent negative variation increased significantly as compared to the baseline. A significant increase in choice reaction time was observed during HDT vs. baseline. The values recovered partially after 30 min of exposure.

    DISCUSSION
    It was concluded that simulated microgravity impacts mental functions as evidenced by alterations in choice reaction time and event-related potential latencies and reaction time. The study has applied value for understanding neurophysiological responses and optimization of cognitive performance in space conditions.

    Link (Aerospace Medicine and Human Performance)
     
  2. SNT Gatchaman

    SNT Gatchaman Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    From Wikipedia, P300 —

     
    Turtle and obeat like this.

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