1. Executive function on the 16-day of bed rest in young healthy men
- Author
-
Hodaka Kobayashi, Tatsuro Ishizaki, Shoichiro Taniuchi, Kazunari Kaneko, Hideoki Fukuoka, Hidetaka Tanaka, Yuri Fujii, Kaoru Ohkawa, Yuko Ishizaki, Yuko Hattori-Uchida, and Minako Nakamura
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Trail Making Test ,Significant difference ,Aerospace Engineering ,Bed rest ,Affect (psychology) ,Cerebral circulation ,Psychophysiology ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Simulated microgravity ,medicine ,business ,Simulation ,Brain function - Abstract
Microgravity due to prolonged bed rest may cause changes in cerebral circulation, which is related to brain function. We evaluate the effect of simulated microgravity due to a 6° head-down tilt bed rest experiment on executive function among 12 healthy young men. Four kinds of psychoneurological tests—the table tapping test, the trail making test, the pointing test and losing at rock–paper–scissors—were performed on the baseline and on day 16 of the experiment. There was no significant difference in the results between the baseline and day 16 on all tests, which indicated that executive function was not impaired by the 16-day 6° head-down tilting bed rest. However, we cannot conclude that microgravity did not affect executive function because of the possible contribution of the following factors: (1) the timing of tests, (2) the learning effect, or (3) changes in psychophysiology that were too small to affect higher brain function.
- Published
- 2009