论文标题
脑电图(EEG),肌电图(EMG)和宇航员训练和太空勘探的眼睛跟踪
Electroencephalography (EEG), electromyography (EMG) and eye-tracking for astronaut training and space exploration
论文作者
论文摘要
持续不断将人类送回月球和火星的努力正在引起广泛的新型技术解决方案,以支持潜在的宇航员探险队。在这种背景下,欧洲航天局(ESA)最近对不引人注目的界面技术进行了调查,以此作为解决此类挑战的一种答案。在这方面显示了三种特殊的技术:基于EEG的脑部计算机界面(BCI)提供了一种非侵入性的方法,用于利用用户大脑的记录电气活动,肌电图(EMG)可以监视对用户肌肉缩写产生的电信号,并通过录制用户的录制,例如,启用了用户的录制,请跟踪用户的景点,从而通过相机的态度进行操作。除了简单地提高潜在技术解决方案的可用性外,我们的发现还表明,EMG,EEG和眼球跟踪也可以用来监测和评估各种认知状态,包括注意力,认知负荷和用户的心理疲劳,而EMG也可以使用,还可以利用用于监测Astronaut的物理状态。在本文中,我们详细阐述了这三种促成技术的关键优势和挑战,鉴于ESA的最新发现,我们在人类太空飞行的背景下反思了它们的适用性。此外,还提供了技术准备时间表。这样一来,本文就对新兴技术的越来越多的论述及其在为人类回到月球和地球轨道以外的探险方面铺平道路中的作用。
The ongoing push to send humans back to the Moon and to Mars is giving rise to a wide range of novel technical solutions in support of prospective astronaut expeditions. Against this backdrop, the European Space Agency (ESA) has recently launched an investigation into unobtrusive interface technologies as a potential answer to such challenges. Three particular technologies have shown promise in this regard: EEG-based brain-computer interfaces (BCI) provide a non-invasive method of utilizing recorded electrical activity of a user's brain, electromyography (EMG) enables monitoring of electrical signals generated by the user's muscle contractions, and finally, eye tracking enables, for instance, the tracking of user's gaze direction via camera recordings to convey commands. Beyond simply improving the usability of prospective technical solutions, our findings indicate that EMG, EEG, and eye-tracking could also serve to monitor and assess a variety of cognitive states, including attention, cognitive load, and mental fatigue of the user, while EMG could furthermore also be utilized to monitor the physical state of the astronaut. In this paper, we elaborate on the key strengths and challenges of these three enabling technologies, and in light of ESA's latest findings, we reflect on their applicability in the context of human space flight. Furthermore, a timeline of technological readiness is provided. In so doing, this paper feeds into the growing discourse on emerging technology and its role in paving the way for a human return to the Moon and expeditions beyond the Earth's orbit.