Page:Effects of Sleep Loss in Space.pdf/17

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Table Needed

Note: AGARD=Advisory Group for Aerospace Research and Development (NATO). STRES=simulated training requirements effectiveness report. GRT=grammatical reasoning task. MST=Memory Search Task. UTT=Unstable Tracking Task. PAWS=Performance Assessment Workstation. VAS=Visual Analog Scale. KSS=Karolinska Sleepiness Scale. DT=dual task.

Manzey et al. (1998) conducted a similar study over an 8-day mission to Mir; this again was a short-duration evaluation using one subject. The study involved administering six pre-flight and six post-flight assessments to one subject, with 13 in-flight assessments occurring during the Soyuz approach to Mir (high stress) and also during the stay on board Mir. Four tasks were administered: grammatical reasoning, MST, UTT, and a DT that consisted of unstable tracking with concurrent memory search. These tasks probe information-processing functions that are known to react sensitively to the adverse effects of environmental stressors or that might become impaired by the direct effects of microgravity on sensory motor processes (Kanas and Manzey, 2000). The speed and accuracy of short-term memory retrieval and logical reasoning were found to be unimpaired under space flight conditions. Decrements, however, were found in fine manual control movements during the UTT. DT interference effects on the tracking task and the memory search were also reflected, increasing from the beginning to the end of the mission.

During the experiment, researchers administered questionnaires to evaluate the crew members' mood, fatigue levels, and assessment of workload. Correlations between reported fatigue and decrements that were observed

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