Current Challenges in Space Neuroscience
A special issue of Life (ISSN 2075-1729). This special issue belongs to the section "Astrobiology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: 18 April 2025 | Viewed by 8854
Special Issue Editors
Interests: learning and memory; neurocircuits; neuroimmunology; sleep; spaceflight stress
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Humankind’s foray into space and eventual interplanetary expeditions present significant challenges that will require an understanding of the effects of living off planet and our ability to adapt to, or develop countermeasures for, the unique conditions in outer space. Astronauts on space missions experience microgravity, psychological stress, sleep loss and disturbances, and exposure to potentially harmful environmental conditions (space radiation, lunar and Martian dust, and prolonged hypercapnia). Exposure to these factors may be repeated or prolonged, and they may interact in their effects across multiple physiological and functional systems, which likely will vary in men and women and with individual differences in resilience and vulnerability. Their impact on the central nervous system and its ability to respond/adapt to their deleterious effects will be a critical determinant of the long-term health of space travelers. Meaningful research on these issues will require collaborations across research fields that have not typically interacted, as well as approaches that consider the demands imposed on terrestrial organisms by the spaceflight environment.
The goal of this Special Issue is to provide a forum for space neuroscience research. We welcome research contributions that address the effects of spaceflight stressors on the brain at the neurocircuit, mechanism and functional level, reviews that address current knowledge in the field and papers on theoretical and modeling approaches needed to advance the field. Topics covered may include cognition, neural structure and function, sleep, spaceflight stress, neural and sensory systems, neuro-adaptive responses as well as other areas relevant to neural function. Papers on technical and engineering approaches needed to understand and/or facilitate neural function during space travel are also welcome.
Dr. Larry D. Sanford
Dr. Richard A. Britten
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- cognition
- microgravity
- sleep
- stress
- Martian and lunar dust
- neural stem cells and progenitors
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