University of California - Santa Barbara

05/01/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 05/01/2025 08:12

New frontiers for well-being in Antarctica and isolated spaces

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Photo illustration by Matt Perko with abstract visuals by Iason Paterakis and Nefeli Manoudaki; Original photo by SCARECROW artworks, Unsplash
AI-generated visuals designed by UCSB researchers help ease the psychological toll of isolation for scientists living and working in Antarctica.
May 1, 2025

New frontiers for well-being in Antarctica and isolated spaces

In one of the world's most isolated and extreme environments, researchers are testing new tools to combat the psychological toll of isolation, and two doctoral students from UC Santa Barbara's Media Arts and Technology (MAT) program are helping to lead the innovation.

Architects-engineersIason Paterakisand Nefeli Manoudaki, graduate researchers in MAT Professor Marcos Novak's transLAB, developed an AI-driven software pipeline now in use at the St. Kliment Ohridski base on Livingston Island, Antarctica. Their system is at the center of a new field study aimed at understanding how customized audio-visual interventions can support mental health for people living and working in extreme environments.

"Our work focused on creating the software pipeline that powers the audio-visual intervention system being tested at the St. Kliment Ohridski base," Paterakis said. "By processing interview data from the Antarctic station crew, our software generates customized visuals that balance familiar elements with abstract patterns like fractals."

The real-time diffusion model at the core of their system draws from the personal memories and preferences of the station's crew, creating endless variations of both natural landscapes and geometrically abstracted visuals. These dynamic, evolving images aim to alleviate the sensory monotony often associated with isolated and confined environments.

"We had two sets of visual content: representational natural landscapes and geometrically abstracted versions," said Manoudaki. "This allowed us to compare their psychological effects on the participants."

Iason Paterakis, Nefeli Manoudaki, AI Driven Abstracted visuals/Forest

The deployment of this work is part of a historic moment: the first official scientific expedition of Greece to Antarctica. Architects Christina Balomenaki and Efharis Gourounti, both alumni of the Technical University of Crete (TUC) and researchers with the university's Transformable Intelligent Environments Laboratory (TUC TIE Lab), carried out the fieldwork as part of the 33rd Expedition of the Bulgarian Antarctic Institute (BAI). Balomenaki and Gourounti are the first Greek women researchers to set foot in Antarctica.

Supported by the Hellenic Polar Zones Society, the Greek Ministries of Development and Foreign Affairs, and private sponsorship, this effort marked a significant step toward Greece's integration into the broader Antarctic research ecosystem.

Balomenaki's experiment, titled "Audio-Visual System to Mitigate the Negative Effects on Stress and Depression in Confined Spaces and Extreme Environments," used the customized content generated by the AI pipeline designed by Paterakis and Manoudaki. The study combined subjective feedback with objective physiological measurements, including electroencephalography and wearable sensors tracking stress markers such as heart rate variability and skin conductance.

"Preliminary analysis of user questionnaires suggests that exposure to these varied visual experiences offers psychological benefits for individuals in extreme isolation conditions," said Paterakis. "The biometric data are currently undergoing comprehensive analysis."

Their work builds on more than a decade of interdisciplinary research into habitability and human resilience in extreme environments by the TUC TIE Lab, including collaborations with NASA and the European Space Agency. The Antarctic mission also represents an ongoing partnership among UC Santa Barbara and Eindhoven University of Technology, and builds upon previous partnerships with the University of Houston and others, demonstrating a broad international effort to address the psychological challenges of isolation.

Beyond Antarctica, the overall TUC TIE lab study and the research component in AI and media led by Paterakis and Manoudaki could find applications in settings as diverse as space missions, underwater habitats, psychiatric facilities and long-term quarantine scenarios. By tailoring immersive visual environments to individual users, the team's work could significantly improve emotional resilience wherever humans venture into the unknown.

Media Contact
Debra Herrick
Associate Editorial Director
(805) 893-2191
debraherrick@ucsb.edu

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About UC Santa Barbara

The University of California, Santa Barbara is a leading research institution that also provides a comprehensive liberal arts learning experience. Our academic community of faculty, students, and staff is characterized by a culture of interdisciplinary collaboration that is responsive to the needs of our multicultural and global society. All of this takes place within a living and learning environment like no other, as we draw inspiration from the beauty and resources of our extraordinary location at the edge of the Pacific Ocean.

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