Fiche publication


Date publication

mai 2025

Journal

Aerospace medicine and human performance

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr BOLMONT Benoît , Dr HAINAUT Jean-Philippe


Tous les auteurs :
Pauly J, Langlet C, Hainaut JP, Yusupova A, Bolmont B

Résumé

Long-duration space missions introduce stressors that can disturb the affective states of astronauts (e.g., isolation, workload). However, studies in space or in space-analog environments struggle to find a consensus on the affective impact of these stressors. Also, there is a lack of research using multiple measures to assess affective states in these conditions (e.g., positive and negative measures and physiological parameters). More research is needed to understand the psycho-physiological mechanisms during long-duration space-like missions. Our study was conducted during a space-analog confinement (SIRIUS-19). Throughout the mission, we assessed variations of affective states using subjective and physiological parameters. We expected interindividual variability, with transitory and chronic changes on the psychological and physiological dimensions of affective states.

Mots clés

SIRIUS-19, affective states, confinement, psychophysiology, stress

Référence

Aerosp Med Hum Perform. 2025 05;96(5):436-442