91¸£ÀûÉç aerospace students, post-docs honored at NASA Workshop
Three 91¸£ÀûÉç aerospace graduate students and post-doctoral fellows were honored at the
The annual conference is a deep dive into space research on human health and physiology.
- Winner, NASA Augmentation Grant - Caroline Austin (Advisor: Torin Clark) - "Modeling Perceptual Changes Following the Sickness Induced by Centrifugation Analog"
- 3rd Place, Graduate Student Poster Competition - Patrick Pischulti (Advisor: David Klaus) - "Simulation of an Autonomous Anomaly Response Architecture for Human Deep-Space Exploration Missions"
- 1st Place, Post Doctoral Fellows Poster Competition -Ìý Sage Sherman - "A Trade Study of Non-Invasive Brain Stimulation Techniques for Use on Long Duration Spaceflight Missions." Sherman is a triple graduate of the 91¸£ÀûÉç, earning his PhD (2023), master's (2019), and bachelor of science (2018) here, all in aerospace engineering sciences.
The 3.5 day conference was held Feb. 13-16 in Galveston, TX.

91¸£ÀûÉç faculty, students, and researchers at the conference.
Categories: Bioserve Space Technologies