Born from the challenge of the Space Race, UCF was created to transform imagination into innovation and prepare people to launch humanity beyond its limits. Today, we are still are a place where our people’s curiosity drives discovery, bold questions shape the future and exploration advances life on Earth.

Founded to reach the moon, we’re already on our way to the next frontier. Built for liftoff, America’s Space University celebrates UCF Space Week Nov. 3-7.

Two UCF researchers working on a telescope
UCF Space Week | Nov 3-7, 2025

Where Global Leaders Unite to Boldly Forge the Future of Space


When humans return to the moon, they won’t be alone. NASA will send robotic machines with them, and like all relationships, trust will be critical.

Through a partnership with Cislune Inc., UCF is using immersive technologies to improve trust between humans and artificial intelligence for decision-making in space when circumstances are changing and data remains uncertain — ultimately ensuring astronaut safety and mission success. To explore these issues, UCF Research Associate Professor of Augmented and Virtual Reality Gerd Bruder helped lead a NASA-sponsored study. The project aims to help reduce cognitive workload for astronauts while enhancing critical data, such as breathable oxygen levels, propellant stores and rover range. It’s also an example of how Knights are developing tech solutions that will propel humanity’s possibilities in space, which UCF was founded to fuel.

UCF computer science doctoral student Hiroshi Furuya.
Hiroshi Furuya

“In future lunar missions, humans will be working in concert with highly autonomous machines — and both will be making decisions while inundated with data from an ever-growing network of sensors and computers,” says Hiroshi Furuya, a UCF computer science doctoral student and graduate research assistant who worked on the project. During Phase I of the project, which was funded by a Small Business Technology Transfer grant, UCF helped Cislune design and build a moon mission simulator to refine human decision-making behavior and optimize interactions between astronauts and autonomous systems over the course of a mission.

Cislune provided insights into space mission operations from previous work with space robotics and rovers, while experts from UCF’s Synthetic Reality Lab (SREAL) supplied expertise in using virtual reality (VR) to create immersive simulations. The collaboration highlights how UCF often works with industry to generate collective impact.

UCF’s team leveraged interdisciplinary knowledge from computer science, engineering and human factors in healthcare — examining decision support systems designed for nurses and medical professionals.

“The healthcare research gave us an insightful window into how practitioners evaluate systems when risk and time pressure are critical features of the workplace, which has important connections for space health and missions,” says Furuya, who was previously awarded a NASA Space Technology Research Fellowship for his graduate studies.

AdventHealth Endowed Chair in Healthcare Simulation Gregory Welch, co-director of SREAL, provided insights into factors that influence trust and the design of human subject experiments.

“I find it fascinating how seemingly subtle changes in how relevant information is conveyed can impact trust and decision making,” says Welch, a computer scientist and engineer in UCF’s College of Nursing.

The team studied how human-machine trust, uncertainty and decision-making intersect by using VR simulations. The resulting simulator prototype immerses users in a realistic, mission-relevant environment.

The simulator could be crucial not only for the Artemis program, but also for future lunar and deep space exploration missions.

Cislune and UCF have submitted a proposal for Phase II of the project, which will expand the simulator and conduct research studies to improve the way machine assistants can help astronauts make decisions under stress and uncertainty.