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Using virtual environment technology for preadapting astronauts to the novel sensory conditions of microgravityA unique training device is being developed at the Johnson Space Center Neurosciences Laboratory to help reduce or eliminate Space Motion Sickness (SMS) and spatial orientation disturbances that occur during spaceflight. The Device for Orientation and Motion Environments Preflight Adaptation Trainer (DOME PAT) uses virtual reality technology to simulate some sensory rearrangements experienced by astronauts in microgravity. By exposing a crew member to this novel environment preflight, it is expected that he/she will become partially adapted, and thereby suffer fewer symptoms inflight. The DOME PAT is a 3.7 m spherical dome, within which a 170 by 100 deg field of view computer-generated visual database is projected. The visual database currently in use depicts the interior of a Shuttle spacelab. The trainee uses a six degree-of-freedom, isometric force hand controller to navigate through the virtual environment. Alternatively, the trainee can be 'moved' about within the virtual environment by the instructor, or can look about within the environment by wearing a restraint that controls scene motion in response to head movements. The computer system is comprised of four personal computers that provide the real time control and user interface, and two Silicon Graphics computers that generate the graphical images. The image generator computers use custom algorithms to compensate for spherical image distortion, while maintaining a video update rate of 30 Hz. The DOME PAT is the first such system known to employ virtual reality technology to reduce the untoward effects of the sensory rearrangement associated with exposure to microgravity, and it does so in a very cost-effective manner.
Document ID
19960007748
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Duncan, K. M.
(Krug Life Sciences, Inc. Houston, TX, United States)
Harm, D. L.
(Space Biomedical Research Inst. Houston, TX., United States)
Crosier, W. G.
(Krug Life Sciences, Inc. Houston, TX, United States)
Worthington, J. W.
(Krug Life Sciences, Inc. Houston, TX, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
May 7, 1993
Publication Information
Publication: NASA. Johnson Space Center, Proceedings of the 1993 Conference on Intelligent Computer-Aided Training and Virtual Environment Technology
Subject Category
Computer Programming And Software
Accession Number
96N14914
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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