Changes for page Amadee-20-POLLY
Last modified by Dominik Rabl on 2021/11/22 16:31
Change comment:
There is no comment for this version
Summary
-
Page properties (3 modified, 0 added, 0 removed)
-
Attachments (0 modified, 0 added, 1 removed)
Details
- Page properties
-
- Title
-
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,1 @@ 1 -Amadee-20- POLLY1 +Amadee-20-ACT - Author
-
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,1 @@ 1 -XWiki. hhinterhauser1 +XWiki.bbishop - Content
-
... ... @@ -1,37 +1,17 @@ 1 1 === Details === 2 2 3 -|**Acronym**|POLLY 4 -|**Description**|The experiment aims to evaluate the potential use of a conversational user interface (CUI) for astronaut scientists in an extraterrestrial habitat 5 -|**Principal Investigator (PI)**|((( 6 -Dr.-Ing. Christiane Heinicke 3 +|**Acronym**|ACT 4 +|**Description**|Utilizing Acceptance and Commitment Therapy to improve participants’ psychological flexibility, stress and well-being, performance and error measures 5 +|**Principal Investigator (PI)**|Karoly Schlosser 6 +|**Organisation** |Institute of Management Studies, Goldsmiths University of London 7 +|**Co-Investigators**|n/a 7 7 8 -[[christiane.heinicke@zarm.uni-bremen.de>>mailto:christiane.heinicke@zarm.uni-bremen.de]] 9 -))) 10 -|**Organisation** |University of Bremen, ZARM -Center of Applied Space Technology and Microgravity 11 -|**Co-Investigators**|((( 12 -Prof. Dr. Johannes Schöning 13 - 14 -University of Bremen, Human-Computer Interaction 15 - 16 -Bibliothekstraße 5, 28359 Bremen, Germany 17 - 18 -email: johannes.schoening@uni-bremen.de, phone: +49-421-218-63590 19 -))) 20 - 21 21 === Summary === 10 +Astronauts are at all times required to provide outstanding performance. They are to remain resilient and to maintain their psychological well-being in order to successfully accomplish their mission in extreme and isolated environments. Future Martian explorers therefore have to be selected and trained to be able to deal with such environments and to be able to maintain an adaptive and resilient mind-set, communicate with others efficiently and pro-actively, process and accept worries and sadness, and to stay persistent with respect to the goals of the mission. 22 22 23 -(% class="image" style="float:right" %) 24 -((( 25 -[[image:ACT_manifest.png||height="266" width="399"]] 26 -))) 12 +In the course of the experiment, all six analog astronauts will be trained in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT). In a wide range of studies, ACT has proven to increase people’s psychological flexibility; this is, their ability to pursue their important goals, even when they experience thoughts, feelings, fears, and emotions that may get in the way of their moving towards those goals. The ACT training will focus on providing key, practical skills that the participants can use in carrying out their daily activities, as well as in interacting with their colleagues. This study aims to assesses the ability of ACT to improve participants’ psychological flexibility, stress and well-being, performance and error measures, narrative contents and communication patterns, cognitive and physiological outcomes. 27 27 28 -The experiment aimso evaluatethe potential useofaconversational userinterface(CUI) for astronautscientistsin anextraterrestrial habitat duringthe AMADEE-20 expedition.Eventhough guidelinesforCUIs weredeveloped decadesago,theinteractionwith these devices is stillcomplicated;therefore, general design guidelines for human-machine interaction need to be improved. Whilehestudiesonunderstanding thewayspeople interactwith CUIs in everyday scenariosare very recent, there isonly a small amount of research on how CUIs canbeused inother(moreextreme) environments –suchasextraterrestrialhabitats.CUIsare supposedto assist astronauts on their challenginglong-duration missions,in particular,to supporthem in research-relatedtasks during spaceflightor planetaryexplorationmissions.The study shall identifytherequirements ofaCUIinan extraterrestrial habitat.Much information in that regardis believed to be containedalready in the “normal” communication between the crew and mission support.Many requests that could be directedat a CUIwill bedirectedtoissionsupport instead; therefore,the teamintends to analyze the missioncommunicationpost-hoc. The mainquestion iswhatkind of information is requested by thecrew. Specifically, inthe areasoffactchecking/informationretrieval, logisticsand timing, general conversation,technical issues andexchanges regarding requests to the on-site support team. Such annalysisis expected to provide valuableinformation for improvingour understandingof howa CUI couldcontributeto a Mars mission and whatcapabilities itwould needto provide.Ata morevisionarylevel, we couldasktowhat extenta(human) missionsupport team could delegate work to a CUI, leavingmore timefororecomplextrouble-shootingandsaving humanresources on Earth, ultimatelymaking Mars missions more autonomous.14 +The study will use a pre - post-test design. The pre-test will be completed by the participants before the ACT training, a post-test after completing the training. Further, a follow-up measure will be taken from participants at the end of their mission. Additional qualitative data will be collected from the analog astronauts in form of a diary. 29 29 30 -=== Experiment Data === 31 31 32 -(% style="height:10px; width:1000px" %) 33 -|=(% style="width: 127px;" %)Date|=(% style="width: 871px;" %)Files 34 -|(% style="width:127px" %)[[2021-10-04>>https://mission.oewf.org/archive_downloads/amadee20/ACT/2021-10-04]]|(% style="width:871px" %)types of files for each experiment day, size of the cells: width 1000px, height 10px 35 -|(% style="width:127px" %) |(% style="width:871px" %) 36 36 37 -
- ACT_manifest.png
-
- Author
-
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -XWiki.hhinterhauser - Size
-
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -209.4 KB - Content