BIOMED   24552
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES BIOMEDICAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Psychological Adaptation to Extreme Environments: Antarctica as a Space Analogue
Autor/es:
TORTELLO, CAMILA; GOLOMBEK, DIEGO A.; TORTELLO, CAMILA; GOLOMBEK, DIEGO A.; BARBARITO, MARTA; VIGO, DANIEL E.; BARBARITO, MARTA; VIGO, DANIEL E.; CUIULI, JUAN MANUEL; PLANO, SANTIAGO A.; CUIULI, JUAN MANUEL; PLANO, SANTIAGO A.
Revista:
Psychology and Behavioral Science International Journal
Editorial:
Juniper publishers
Referencias:
Año: 2018 vol. 9
ISSN:
2474-7688
Resumen:
Space analogues are settings where conditions can be reproduced to study biological and psychological variables experienced in space. Antarctica is one of the most reliable analogues to assess the effects of isolation, confinement, light-dark cycle and extreme environmental conditions in human being. In the present review we describe some of the aspects of psychological adaptation to extreme latitudes.Most of the studies found some evidence about changes in emotional states during Antarctica expeditions. However, these changes are highly variable, and beneficial as well as detrimental aspects of adaptation have been described. Adaptation to extreme environments is a complex phenomenon that needs multidimensional studies to be fully understood, comprising aspects such as seasonality, psychological traits, isolation conditions and social interactions.