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Beyond Low Earth Orbit: Biomonitoring, Artificial Intelligence, and Precision Space Health

22 December 2021
Ryan T. Scott
E. Antonsen
Lauren M Sanders
Jaden J. A. Hastings
Seung-min Park
Graham Mackintosh
R. Reynolds
A. Hoarfrost
A. Sawyer
C. Greene
Benjamin S. Glicksberg
C. Theriot
D. Berrios
Jack M. Miller
Joel Babdor
Richard Barker
Sergio Baranzini
A. Beheshti
S. Chalk
Guillermo M. Delgado-Aparicio
M. Haendel
Arif A. Hamid
P. Heller
Daniel Jamieson
San Francisco
John Kalantari
Kia Khezeli
S. Komarova
M. Komorowski
Prachi Kothiyal
Ashish Mahabal
U. Manor
Department of Materials Science
Christopher E. Mason
Mona Matar
College of Materials Science
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine
London
Jonathan Oribello
Biological Systems
R. Prabhu
San Antonio
Montreal.
Amanda M. Saravia-Butler
UT Health Sciences
Engineering
Frank Soboczenski
Medical Faculty
Karthik Soman
Data Science
Iss National Laboratory
Baltimore.
Biochemistry
Jason H. Yang
Re-Emerging Pathogens
Harvard University
ArXivPDFHTML
Abstract

Human space exploration beyond low Earth orbit will involve missions of significant distance and duration. To effectively mitigate myriad space health hazards, paradigm shifts in data and space health systems are necessary to enable Earth-independence, rather than Earth-reliance. Promising developments in the fields of artificial intelligence and machine learning for biology and health can address these needs. We propose an appropriately autonomous and intelligent Precision Space Health system that will monitor, aggregate, and assess biomedical statuses; analyze and predict personalized adverse health outcomes; adapt and respond to newly accumulated data; and provide preventive, actionable, and timely insights to individual deep space crew members and iterative decision support to their crew medical officer. Here we present a summary of recommendations from a workshop organized by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, on future applications of artificial intelligence in space biology and health. In the next decade, biomonitoring technology, biomarker science, spacecraft hardware, intelligent software, and streamlined data management must mature and be woven together into a Precision Space Health system to enable humanity to thrive in deep space.

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