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UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 3D SPACE Mental Representation of Spatial Cues During Spaceflight.

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Presentation on theme: "UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 3D SPACE Mental Representation of Spatial Cues During Spaceflight."— Presentation transcript:

1 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 3D SPACE Mental Representation of Spatial Cues During Spaceflight

2 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 2 3D SPACE Principal Investigator Gilles Clément, PhD Centre de Recherche Cerveau et Cognition UMR 5549 CNRS / Université Paul Sabatier Co- Principal Investigator Corinna E. Lathan, Ph.D. AnthroTronix, Inc (USA) Payload Developer CNES - Toulouse USOC CADMOS Toulouse (Eric Lorigny / Eric.Lorigny@cnes.fr / +33-561282715) (Laura Aandré-Boyet / Laura.Andre-Boyet@medes.cnes.fr / +33-561274359 )Eric.Lorigny@cnes.frLaura.Andre-Boyet@medes.cnes.fr

3 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 3 Contents Experiment goals Scientific objectives Mission Scenario Planning overview Flight Ops Overview Payload Description 3D SPACE

4 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 4 Objectives The purpose of this experiment is to investigate the effects of exposure to microgravity on the mental representation of spatial cues by astronauts during and after space flight. The 3DS will allow further identification of the role of gravity in the mental representation of 3D objects and environment by: 1.Evaluating the effects of microgravity on the mental representation of the 3D environment during long-duration space missions. 2.Using the free-floating condition to minimize orientation and cognitive references. 3.Distinguishing the effects of cognitive vs. perceptual motor changes. Experiment goals Expected results The results of this study could have important consequences for human performance during spaceflight. Indeed, a virtual reality training may be a way to train the astronauts to compensate for such altered spatial representation and enables to reduce disorientation and stress, to improve astronaut’s ability to manipulate objects or operate dexterous manipulators such as robotic arms, to better perception of the space habitat design by astronauts. 3D SPACE

5 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 5 3D SPACE Scientific Objectives Perception of geometric illusions Spatial and dynamics components of handwriting and drawing of memorized objects with the eyes closed

6 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 6 3D SPACE Scientific Objectives Perception of distances –Distance cues contain information which, when added to the 2-D image projected onto the retina, allow us to relate the objects of the image to 3-D space –Distance cues the most likely to be affected by spaceflight are: Accommodation Motion parallax Aerial perspective Shade and shadows Texture gradient Linear perspective

7 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 7 3D SPACE Scientific Objectives Perception of distances Adjust C so that distance BC=AB, BC=AB/2, etc. A B C

8 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 8 Stowage and Operations Stowage and Operations in Columbus The experiment sessions will be performed Starting from INC 17 (May 2008) 4 sessions of 1 h each are planned for each Test Subject (long duration) First Test Subject: G. Chamitoff (USA) Total number of subject required: 10 Mission Scenario Upload 16 S, launch scheduled on the 8 th of April 2008 (pre-positioning) AT2 in Moscow scheduled on weeks 10 or 11 Download For each Test Subject 1 PCMCIA card will be downloaded; First PCMCIA card download planned with ULF2 3D SPACE

9 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 9 Planning Overview Pre-flight BDC 3D SPACE FEBRUARY MARCH APRIL 25 29 04 07 16 S STS-124 08 24 BDC 1 BDC 2 BDC 3 TBD Duration of each session is 45 minutes: set-up: 5 min., tests: 3 x 10 min., pauses: 10 min

10 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 10 Planning Overview In-flight measurements 3D SPACE JULY JUNE MAY APRIL STS-124 03 16 12 FD+10 FD+50 FD+23 FD+80 16S 08 24

11 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 11 3DS In-flight OPS 1/4 Installation of the MPPLL: connect laptop to its power supply Installation of 3D Space Removable Hard Disk in the laptop Connection of 3DS devices to the laptop Installation of the legs straps and the tablet Setting up of the HMD and wearing of the Nomex hood Equipment correct installation test Setup 15 Min Equipment set-up 3D SPACE

12 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 12 Equipment set up Setup 15 Min HUB USB 2 MPPLL USB 1 VGA Tablet Finger TrackBall Controller HMD 3DS In-flight OPS 2/4 3D SPACE

13 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 13 10 min FO1FO2 10 min FO3 FO1: Depth Perception Tests (using 2D geometric illusions, and 3D objects) FO2: Handwriting and Drawing Tasks (of memorized objects) FO3: Distance Perception Tests (using 3D scenes) 3DS In-flight OPS 3/4 Scientific Test 3D SPACE

14 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 14 Stow 15 Min Nomex hood doff HMD and the leg straps putting out Disconnection of 3DS devices from the MPPLL Stowage of the Equipment into the related pouches De-installation of the MPPLL Laptop 3DS In-flight OPS 4/4 Session close-out 3D SPACE

15 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 15 Planning Overview Post-flight BDC 3D SPACE R+0R+1 or R+2R+4 ± 1 day R+8 ± 2 days (only if R+4 responses have not returned to pre-flight baseline values) OCTOBER STS-126 16 17 18 2024

16 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 16 OPS Overview 1/2 Flight operations summary: Laptop and 3DS equipment set-up SW Test (free-floating subject) Session close-out 3DS will use the Multi Purpose Payload Laptop (IBM Thinkpad Series A31p) The A31p offers the possibility to easily remove the internal CD/DVD drive and to insert an Ultrabay HD adapter with an inserted 2,5” standard Harddisk. 3D SPACE

17 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 17 OPS Overview 2/2 The FO sequence can be chosen by the test subject. Example of SW test view: 3D SPACE

18 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 18 Payload Description 1/5 3DS Digitizing Tablet pouch closed (46.8 x 37 x 5.4 cm ) 2580g Launch configuration: 1.Digitizing Tablet Pouch 2.HMD Pouch 3DS HMD pouch closed (13.5 x 18x 25.5 cm) 1600g 3D SPACE

19 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 19 Payload Description 2/5 Digitizing Tablet pouch content: Dig. Tablet 2 Pencils 2 Leg straps Wacom tablets use an electromagnetic resonance technology: the tablet provides power to the pen through resonant coupling, no batteries or cord are used. The Tablet is powered by the USB laptop port 3D SPACE

20 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 20 Payload Description 3/5 Head Mounted Display pouch content Nomex Hood PCMCIA cards Finger trackball USB port Hub Removable hard disk USB cable for HMD (60 cm) VGA cable for HMD (30 cm) PCMCIA card pouch HMD 3D SPACE

21 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 21 Payload Description 4/5 Head Mounted Display (and controller) The HMD uses organic light emitting diode (OLED) microdisplays for the two display screens ; In the OLED the emissive electroluminescent layer is comprised of a film of organic compounds The two OLED screens are made of a thin glass substrate and will be covered by a LEXAN ™ film. 3D SPACE

22 UPOWG#23 – Huntsville Feb. 2008 N° 22 3D SPACE Z800 3DVisor eMagin Payload Description 5/5


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