sa国际传媒

Skip to content

Okanagan scientist headed to sa国际传媒楳arssa国际传媒

UBCOsa国际传媒檚 Gord Binsted is one of six scientists heading to the Hawaii Space Exploration Analog and Simulation Lab
19537707_web1_RkgNtSjQ
Gord Binsted is Dean of the Faculty of Health and Social Development and one of the lead researchers on a Canadian mission to the HI-SEAS Mars simulation habitat. (Contributed)

While a trip to the red planet may still be years away, a team of Canadian researchers, including a scientist from UBCO, are headed to a simulated Mars habitat on Hawaiisa国际传媒檚 Mauna Loa at the end of November.

Their mission launches with the goal of designing and running experiments to measure the brain function of astronauts as they become fatigued in space.

The team of researchers heading to the Hawaii Space Exploration Analog and Simulation lab (HI-SEAS) consists of scientists from UBCsa国际传媒檚 Okanagan campus, the University of Victoria and the University of Calgary.

sa国际传媒淐rew time on space missions is planned right down to the minute,sa国际传媒 explains Gord Binsted, dean in the faculty of health and social development at UBC Okanagan and one of the research leaders.

sa国际传媒淭he challenge for us is to create an experiment that is simple enough for any of the crew to perform within very tight time constraints, likely 20 to 30 minutes per day, while still generating valuable scientific data.sa国际传媒

READ MORE: RDCO board members to vote on climate emergency declaration

The researchers will be expected to continue the regular operations and maintenance of the habitat while they conduct scientific work, which Binsted said will help them understand the rigors astronauts will be under as they design their experiments.

The team will study a concept called cognitive fatigue, where the brain begins to make poor decisions the more tired it gets.

sa国际传媒淧revious research has shown that the brain still functions normally if yousa国际传媒檙e a little fatigued. But at a certain point, the cumulative effect of over-fatigue means that the brain falls off a cliff and things like memory recall, mood and decision making are significantly impaired,sa国际传媒 said Binsted. sa国际传媒淧oor decision making can be fatal in the context of a space mission.sa国际传媒

Olav Krigolson, associate professor at UVic and co-lead researcher, said the team hopes to use an electroencephalogram (EEG) to map the electrical activity of the brain as it becomes fatigued, used to predict when the mindsa国际传媒檚 about to crash and lead to poor decisions.

sa国际传媒淲esa国际传媒檒l be using a simple but powerful consumer-grade EEG device called Muse and a smartphone to conduct our experiments,sa国际传媒 said Krigolson. sa国际传媒淭en years ago, this kind of equipment would have been much larger and cost $100,000, but today wesa国际传媒檙e able to carry everything in one hand for just a few hundred dollars, making it ideal for a space mission.sa国际传媒

READ MORE: Two Kelowna schools qualify for robotics competition

The research team will be in the Mars simulation for eight days. While they wonsa国际传媒檛 ever leave the surface of Earth, Binsted said the experience will be as real as it gets.

sa国际传媒淭he site is barren and completely isolated from civilization. Theresa国际传媒檚 a 40-minute time delay on all communications, the six-member crew will be living in a 1,200-square-foot habitat and wesa国际传媒檒l have to wear spacesuits to go outside,sa国际传媒 explains Binsted. sa国际传媒淚tsa国际传媒檚 all pretty surreal.sa国际传媒

The team departs on November 28 and will be blogging their experience throughout the mission at .



daniel.taylor@kelownacapnews.com

Like us on and follow us on .





(or

sa国际传媒

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }