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A multinational team led by Philippe Lefèvre at Université catholique de Louvain reported that astronauts retain a long‑standing ‘memory’ of Earth gravity that alters basic hand movements in microgravity.
The Journal of Neuroscience study, published 20–21 April 2026, tracked 11 European Space Agency crewmembers on five‑ to six‑month International Space Station missions.
In weightlessness, astronauts tended to grip objects more strongly and showed unexpected asymmetries in force across movements — behaviour researchers interpret as the brain overcompensating for an internally expected weight.
Tests conducted shortly after splashdown showed residual miscalibration of grip, although repeated movements on Earth produced a rapid readaptation in the lab setting.
Authors warn that these sensorimotor changes could raise safety risks during delicate tasks, spacewalks, robotic manipulation or surface operations in partial gravity (Moon, Mars). The team calls for tailored training, tool and procedure design, and further study of longer missions and partial‑gravity environments to reduce operational hazards.
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Commenters converge on two points: the reported sensorimotor effects are actionable — artificial gravity (periodic centrifugation or rotating habitats) is a plausible mitigation — and rigorous tests with better controls and dedicated spin‑gravity platforms are needed to separate training/safety behaviour from true neurovestibular adaptation.







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