MIKE
SCHNEIDER
Associated
Press Writer
CAPE
CANAVERAL, Florida
(AP) -- Dear Diary, the astronauts write.
Well, maybe
not in those exact words. But three times a week, the two U.S. astronauts aboard the international space station
write down their private thoughts in their personal journals.
They write
about their moods, their complaints, how they feel, what they miss, whether
they are sick of the food or are not getting along with their roommates up in
space.
It may
sound like school, but it's really for science.
These
diaries will be reviewed by a researcher in California who wants to measure how spending six months cooped up with just two
other people at a time, 220 miles (350 kilometers) above Earth, can affect
outlook and morale.
''It comes
out looking like a gossip column, I'm sure,'' said astronaut Sunita Williams
shortly before she arrived at the space station in December. ''But the point is
to identify characteristics that will make expeditions successful.''
Williams
and Michael Lopez-Alegria, the station's other current U.S. crew member, are told to be brutally honest. While
astronauts also typically keep public journals that are available on NASA's Web
site, these entries will be read only by Jack Stuster, a Santa Barbara,
California-based researcher who has been downlinking space station journal
entries once a month since 2003.
The results
of Stuster's investigation will help NASA and other space agencies plan for and
train astronauts for even longer stays on the moon and Mars in the future.
According
to the Bioastronautics Roadmap, the document NASA uses for identifying and
reducing risks in space, some U.S. and
Russian crew members periodically fail to work well with each other.
''Interpersonal
distrust, dislike, misunderstanding and poor communication have led to
potentially dangerous situations, such as crew members refusing to speak to
each other during critical operations, or withdrawing from voice communications
with ground controllers,'' the Bioastronautics Roadmap said.
Often the
gripes have to do with logistical issues and inefficiencies on the ground and
in space.
The Russian
cosmonauts appear to have a more antagonistic relationship with their mission
controllers on the ground than Americans do, the U.S. astronauts have commented.
''Some of
(the Russians) feel obligated to argue about every little thing,'' Stuster
said. ''But that might be more of a cultural thing.''
Stuster,
who has a doctorate in anthropology, breaks down the prose descriptions into
measurable data by dividing the entries into 18 categories and noting whether
the tone is positive, negative or neutral.
He also
notes how many days into the mission the entry is made so he can divide the
information into quarters of time. Astronauts suffer what might be described as
the third-quarter blues; their positive entries drop during the third quarter
of their stay. Stuster noticed a similar pattern in an earlier study he did of
French doctors living in Antarctica.
Former
astronaut Leroy Chiao, who lived at the space station in 2004 and 2005, found
the journal-writing helpful.
''I used it
almost as a therapy for myself _ if I were upset about something or frustrated,
I'd write that out,'' Chiao said.
Sometimes
those entries were long, he said.