Food Acceptability, Menu Fatigue, and Aversion on ISS MissionsThe acceptability of the spaceflight food system has been linked to caloric intake and associated nutritional benefits. The diets of the United States Operating Segment crewmembers during a mission are restricted to 200 processed and prepackaged standard menu items supplemented with personal preference foods. ISS crew members have noted in debriefs that they would prefer more food variety for the length of the missions and they tire of certain foods over six months. It is possible that menu fatigue leads to decreases in acceptability and increased aversion to available foods, potentially contributing to the body mass loss often experienced by ISS crew. However, the impact of repeat food consumption on acceptability within the current spaceflight food system has not yet been systematically investigated. Limited variety and crew preferences within food categories may have more severe physical and behavioral health and performance consequences as mission duration increases. Characterizing the relationship between food acceptability and mission duration will contribute to defining requirements for an acceptable food system that will support crew health and performance on long duration missions.
Document ID
20200001311
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Poster
Authors
Douglas, Grace L. (NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Roma, Peter G. (Wyle Laboratories, Inc. Houston, TX, United States)
Young, Millennia (NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)