Identifying blood biomarkers and physiological processes that distinguish humans with superior performance under psychological stress.

BACKGROUND:Attrition of students from aviation training is a serious financial and operational concern for the U.S. Navy. Each late stage navy aviator training failure costs the taxpayer over $1,000,000 and ultimately results in decreased operational readiness of the fleet. Currently, potential avia...

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Main Authors: Amanda M Cooksey, Nausheen Momen, Russell Stocker, Shane C Burgess
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2009-12-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2791215?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-6b3d15c8812c487f8fc69ac624e13b9f2020-11-25T01:22:52ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032009-12-01412e837110.1371/journal.pone.0008371Identifying blood biomarkers and physiological processes that distinguish humans with superior performance under psychological stress.Amanda M CookseyNausheen MomenRussell StockerShane C BurgessBACKGROUND:Attrition of students from aviation training is a serious financial and operational concern for the U.S. Navy. Each late stage navy aviator training failure costs the taxpayer over $1,000,000 and ultimately results in decreased operational readiness of the fleet. Currently, potential aviators are selected based on the Aviation Selection Test Battery (ASTB), which is a series of multiple-choice tests that evaluate basic and aviation-related knowledge and ability. However, the ASTB does not evaluate a person's response to stress. This is important because operating sophisticated aircraft demands exceptional performance and causes high psychological stress. Some people are more resistant to this type of stress, and consequently better able to cope with the demands of naval aviation, than others. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:Although many psychological studies have examined psychological stress resistance none have taken advantage of the human genome sequence. Here we use high-throughput -omic biology methods and a novel statistical data normalization method to identify plasma proteins associated with human performance under psychological stress. We identified proteins involved in four basic physiological processes: innate immunity, cardiac function, coagulation and plasma lipid physiology. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:The proteins identified here further elucidate the physiological response to psychological stress and suggest a hypothesis that stress-susceptible pilots may be more prone to shock. This work also provides potential biomarkers for screening humans for capability of superior performance under stress.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2791215?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amanda M Cooksey
Nausheen Momen
Russell Stocker
Shane C Burgess
spellingShingle Amanda M Cooksey
Nausheen Momen
Russell Stocker
Shane C Burgess
Identifying blood biomarkers and physiological processes that distinguish humans with superior performance under psychological stress.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Amanda M Cooksey
Nausheen Momen
Russell Stocker
Shane C Burgess
author_sort Amanda M Cooksey
title Identifying blood biomarkers and physiological processes that distinguish humans with superior performance under psychological stress.
title_short Identifying blood biomarkers and physiological processes that distinguish humans with superior performance under psychological stress.
title_full Identifying blood biomarkers and physiological processes that distinguish humans with superior performance under psychological stress.
title_fullStr Identifying blood biomarkers and physiological processes that distinguish humans with superior performance under psychological stress.
title_full_unstemmed Identifying blood biomarkers and physiological processes that distinguish humans with superior performance under psychological stress.
title_sort identifying blood biomarkers and physiological processes that distinguish humans with superior performance under psychological stress.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2009-12-01
description BACKGROUND:Attrition of students from aviation training is a serious financial and operational concern for the U.S. Navy. Each late stage navy aviator training failure costs the taxpayer over $1,000,000 and ultimately results in decreased operational readiness of the fleet. Currently, potential aviators are selected based on the Aviation Selection Test Battery (ASTB), which is a series of multiple-choice tests that evaluate basic and aviation-related knowledge and ability. However, the ASTB does not evaluate a person's response to stress. This is important because operating sophisticated aircraft demands exceptional performance and causes high psychological stress. Some people are more resistant to this type of stress, and consequently better able to cope with the demands of naval aviation, than others. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:Although many psychological studies have examined psychological stress resistance none have taken advantage of the human genome sequence. Here we use high-throughput -omic biology methods and a novel statistical data normalization method to identify plasma proteins associated with human performance under psychological stress. We identified proteins involved in four basic physiological processes: innate immunity, cardiac function, coagulation and plasma lipid physiology. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:The proteins identified here further elucidate the physiological response to psychological stress and suggest a hypothesis that stress-susceptible pilots may be more prone to shock. This work also provides potential biomarkers for screening humans for capability of superior performance under stress.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2791215?pdf=render
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