The Effect of Dry Immersion on the Characteristics of Joystick Control during the Performance of a Visual-Motor Task in Men and Women

被引:0
作者
N. V. Miller [1 ]
L. N. Zobova [1 ]
A. M. Badakva [1 ]
机构
[1] Institute of Biomedical Problems, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow
关键词
dry immersion; gender differences; motor control; visual-motor task;
D O I
10.1134/S0362119724700804
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Abstract: A study of the effect of dry immersion (DI) on the characteristics of joystick control during a visual-motor task in men and women was conducted. It is shown that in the first days of DI, there is a deterioration in the performance of the visual-motor task, an increase in time indicators and a decrease in movement accuracy. By the end of DI, most of the parameters returned to the control level, indicating the adaptation of the hand movement control mechanisms to immersion conditions. However, despite the similarity of the effect of DI on changes in the parameters of movement trajectories in men and women, it was shown that both in control and in DI, women performed the presented visual-motor task faster and more accurately due to a longer latency time. In the early days of DI, the characteristics of task performance in women changed less than in men, which indicated a better adaptation of women to the conditions of DI. In the process of adaptation to DI factors, men and women had different strategies for performing visual-motor tasks. © Pleiades Publishing, Inc. 2024.
引用
收藏
页码:358 / 365
页数:7
相关论文
共 28 条
[1]  
Kozlovskaya I.B., Gravity and the tonic postural motor system, Hum. Physiol, 44, (2018)
[2]  
Kornilova L.N., Naumov I.A., Glukhikh D.O., Vestibular function and space motion sickness, Hum. Physiol, 43, (2017)
[3]  
Carriot J., Mackrous I., Cullen K.E., Challenges to the vestibular system in space: how the brain responds and adapts to microgravity, Front. Neural Circuits, 15, (2021)
[4]  
Jamsek M.J., Kunavar T., Blohm G., Effects of simulated microgravity and hypergravity conditions on arm movements in normogravity, Front. Neural Circuits, 15, (2021)
[5]  
Tays G.D., Hupfeld K.E., McGregor H.R., The effects of long duration spaceflight on sensorimotor control and cognition, Front. Neural Circuits, 15, (2021)
[6]  
Mechtcheriakov S., Berger M., Molokanova E., Slowing of human arm movements during weightlessness: the role of vision, Eur. J. Appl. Physiol, 87, (2002)
[7]  
Koppelmans V., Bloomberg J., Mulavara A., Seidler R., Brain structural plasticity with spaceflight, NPJ Microgravity, 2, (2016)
[8]  
van Ombergen A., Jillings S., Jeurissen B., Brain ventricular volume changes induced by long-duration spaceflight, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A, 116, (2019)
[9]  
Jillings S., van Ombergen A., Tomilovskaya E., Et al., Macro and microstructural changes in cosmonauts’ brains after long-duration spaceflight, Sci. Adv, 6, 36, (2020)
[10]  
Clement G.R., Boyle R.D., George K.A., Challenges to the central nervous system during human spaceflight missions to Mars, J. Neurophysiol, 123, (2020)