Status Report

NASA Blogs: Mac’s Blog: Baby Shampoo, Ultralights, and Annoying Black Squares

By SpaceRef Editor
October 22, 2008
Filed under , ,
NASA Blogs: Mac’s Blog: Baby Shampoo, Ultralights, and Annoying Black Squares
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Posted on Oct 19, 2008 by Mac Zborowski

Finally! The testing has started! We’re getting data!

Last week, I got to complete a round of testing. Though this didn’t involve the fNIRS setup (lasers), it did utilize an EEG, or electroencephalography (pronounced with a sneeze).

The EEG that we have involves sensors in little watch battery size capsules that have small electrodes touching the scalp, and they are attached to a hair net – like cap. The cap is then cinched onto my head. The senors record electrical impulses that the brain gives off, and transfer that data into a software package on a computer.

To get a good connection between my scalp and the electrodes inside the sensors, Terry used a solution made up of potassium chloride, water, and baby shampoo, you heard right…BABY SHAMPOO. For the rest of the day, I smelled like a baby! (…all in the name of science, right?)

The image below is the EEG setup using the pitch – roll seat and a baby shampoo smelling guinea pig…me!

The test was a series of smaller tasks that involved resting, finger tapping, word association, flight of an ultralight aircraft in the simulator, and a response exercise.

Resting was the same as with the fNIRS test from the previous post. Though, this time instead of thinking of floating on the ISS, I was thinking of cruising in an F104 Starfighter (Kelly Johnson, look him up).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F-104_Starfighter

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarence_L._Johnson

Yes, believe it or not, that is relaxing to me.

Then came the finger tapping test that I completed before, using the fNIRS.

After that, word association. Again, same as the previous exercise using the fNIRS.

Then came some FUN! We fired up the simulator and the seat. I was tasked with flying an ultralight through a series of gates. This wasn’t that intense of a task considering the simulated ultralight doesn’t need crisp control actions. It’s what I call “lazy flying.” Nice and slow flying with subdued control inputs.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultralight_aviation

There were 3 gates that varied in elevation and required me to increase and decrease power using the throttle. That was a fun test, primarily because it not only supplied data from a test subject that was flying using the simulator, but also because the gates were located at Edwards Air Force Base!

http://www.edwards.af.mil/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edwards_Air_Force_Base

Finally, the black box task. Ughhh, those black squares…

Angela tells me that the task was taken from a series or tests that are used to test cognition as well as other psychological issues. The task that I’ll be talking about is #3 (TOVA) in the list in the link:

http://pebl.sourceforge.net/battery.html

So, I was tasked with a test that recorded my response to a series of black squares that appeared on the screen of pitch – roll seat. I was to look at the screen and tap the space bar every time a small black square appeared in the top half of a big white square. I was NOT supposed to tap the space bar when the small black square appeared in the bottom half of the big white square. Here’s the kicker: I had to watch for the little, small, blinking, and really annoying black square for 20+ minutes!! Yes, 20+ minutes…that’s 1200+ seconds, or almost half an hour just watching, waiting, tapping, NOT tapping, CONCENTRATING.

I think that this was a better test then all of the others. I was really forced to concentrate for this task, making sure that I don’t tap the key, that I tap the key. Sounds simple, right? Ha! Don’t forget about your eyes, your muscles, your body. I was sitting in one position for 20+ minutes looking at one area in my field – of – view, trying not to blink when the squares appeared, and blinking when I just pressed or not pressed the key. Awesome test, but boy was that ANNOYING. But nothing gets annoying more than this: I MISSED ONE! I pressed the key when I should not have!! (*..insert sigh here*).

All in all, it was great to get the first official test knocked out. I hope that Angela can get some good data from all those tasks.

Below is a pic I took right after the test…remember…I smelled like baby shampoo when i took this pic! I’d like to thank Angela and Terry for making me look like this for the rest of the day…

SpaceRef staff editor.