Long-duration head down bed rest as an analog of microgravity: Effects on the static perception of upright

Author:

Harris Laurence R.12,Jenkin Michael13,Herpers Rainer34

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Vision Research, York University, Toronto, Canada

2. Department of Psychology, York University, Toronto, Canada

3. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, York University, Toronto, Canada

4. Institute of Visual Computing, Bonn-Rhein-Sieg University of Applied Sciences, St. Augustin, Germany

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Humans demonstrate many physiological changes in microgravity for which long-duration head down bed rest (HDBR) is a reliable analog. However, information on how HDBR affects sensory processing is lacking. OBJECTIVE: We previously showed [25] that microgravity alters the weighting applied to visual cues in determining the perceptual upright (PU), an effect that lasts long after return. Does long-duration HDBR have comparable effects? METHODS: We assessed static spatial orientation using the luminous line test (subjective visual vertical, SVV) and the oriented character recognition test (PU) before, during and after 21 days of 6° HDBR in 10 participants. Methods were essentially identical as previously used in orbit [25]. RESULTS: Overall, HDBR had no effect on the reliance on visual relative to body cues in determining the PU. However, when considering the three critical time points (pre-bed rest, end of bed rest, and 14 days post-bed rest) there was a significant decrease in reliance on visual relative to body cues, as found in microgravity. The ratio had an average time constant of 7.28 days and returned to pre-bed-rest levels within 14 days. The SVV was unaffected. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that bed rest can be a useful analog for the study of the perception of static self-orientation during long-term exposure to microgravity. More detailed work on the precise time course of our effects is needed in both bed rest and microgravity conditions.

Publisher

IOS Press

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Sensory Systems,Otorhinolaryngology,General Neuroscience

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