06
Fri, Feb

The Rise of the Aquanaut

Offshore Engineer
The feeling of awe and planetary connection experienced by astronauts observing Earth from low space orbit is known as the “overview effect,” a term coined by Frank White, the author of numerous

The feeling of awe and planetary connection experienced by astronauts observing Earth from low space orbit is known as the “overview effect,” a term coined by Frank White, the author of numerous books on space exploration and science. Now researchers from Northeastern University have documented a similar cognitive shift among aquanauts, people who live and work under the sea. They call it the “underview effect.”

Sharing that sense of wonder and kinship with nature with the public could be key to helping understand and conserve the ocean environment, according to the research published in Environment & Behavior.

“We’re at this juncture where we’re realizing that a business-as-usual approach to how we interact with nature and especially the ocean is just not going to cut it,” said Brian Helmuth, professor at Northeastern and one of the authors of the study.

Lead author Kristen Kilgallen, a Ph.D. student at Northeastern, interviewed 14 aquanauts — one of whom is also an astronaut — about the psychological, behavioral and cognitive changes they experienced living underwater for extended periods of time.

Normally, scuba divers can only descend to a depth of 60 feet for 45 minutes before they have to resurface to avoid decompression sickness. Saturation

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