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SeminarNeuroscience

The impact of spaceflight on sleep and circadian rhythms

Erin E. Flynn-Evans
NASA Ames Research Center (USA)
Apr 28, 2022

What happens to human sleep and circadian rhythms in space? There are many challenges that affect sleep in space, including unusual patterns of light exposure and the influence of microgravity. This talk will review the causes and consequences of sleep loss and circadian misalignment during spaceflight and will discuss how missions to the Moon and Mars will be different than missions to the International Space Station.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The effect of gravity on the perception of distance and self-motion: a multisensory perspective

Laurence Harris
Centre for Vision Research, York University, Toronto
Feb 10, 2022

Gravity is a constant in our lives. It provides an internalized reference to which all other perceptions are related. We can experimentally manipulate the relationship between physical gravity with other cues to the direction of “up” using virtual reality - with either HMDs or specially built tilting environments - to explore how gravity contributes to perceptual judgements. The effect of gravity can also be cancelled by running experiments on the International Space Station in low Earth orbit. Changing orientation relative to gravity - or even just perceived orientation – affects your perception of how far away things are (they appear closer when supine or prone). Cancelling gravity altogether has a similar effect. Changing orientation also affects how much visual motion is needed to perceive a particular travel distance (you need less when supine or prone). Adapting to zero gravity has the opposite effect (you need more). These results will be discussed in terms of their practical consequences and the multisensory processes involved, in particular the response to visual-vestibular conflict.

SeminarNeuroscience

The effect of gravity on the perception of distance and self-motion

Laurence Harris
Centre for Vision Research, York University, Toronto, Canada
Apr 19, 2021

Gravity is a constant in our lives. It provides an internalized reference to which all other perceptions are related. We can experimentally manipulate the relationship between physical gravity with other cues to the direction of “up” using virtual reality - with either HMDs or specially built tilting environments - to explore how gravity contributes to perceptual judgements. The effect of gravity can also be cancelled by running experiments on the International Space Station in low Earth orbit. Changing orientation relative to gravity - or even just perceived orientation – affects your perception of how far away things are (they appear closer when supine or prone). Cancelling gravity altogether has a similar effect. Changing orientation also affects how much visual motion is needed to perceive a particular travel distance (you need less when supine or prone). Adapting to zero gravity has the opposite effect (you need more). These results will be discussed in terms of their practical consequences and the multisensory processes involved, in particular the response to visual-vestibular conflict.

ePosterNeuroscience

The asymmetric brain: Utilizing hyper-gravity to manipulate developmental symmetries

Felix Graf, Robin Hiesinger

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Behavioral impacts of simulated microgravity on male mice: Locomotion, social interactions and memory in a novel object recognition task

Jean-Luc Morel, Margot Issertine, Thomas Brioche, Angèle Chopard, Laurence Vico, Julie Le Merrer, Théo Fovet, Jérôme Becker

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Blood-spinal cord barrier alterations in a mouse model of centrifugation-induced hypergravity

David Dubayle, Nicolas Rebergue, Yann Godfrin, Jean-Luc Morel, Sighild Lemarchant

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Modulation of brain commands and spinal pathways in human upper limb control in various gravity conditions; insights from neuromusculoskeletal simulation

Alice Bruel, Lina Bacha, Auke Ijspeert

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Sex-related impairment of synaptic plasticity in the hippocampus of hypergravity-exposed mice: New insights for space cognition

Mathilde Wullen, Valentine Bouet, Thomas Freret, Jean-Marie Billard

FENS Forum 2024

gravity coverage

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