While rodents have flown on space shuttle flights in the past, those missions have only lasted a week or two.
The new mission, however, could range between 30 and 90 days, depending on the availability of spacecraft to ferry them on the round-trip, 'Space.Com' reported.
"This will allow animals to be studied for longer period of time on space station missions," said Julie Robinson, NASA's chief scientist for the space station.
The actual schedule for launching the rats to the space station and returning them back to Earth is not fully figured out yet, the report said.
Launching rats on for the experiment are preferable to mice, which are smaller and require less food, because rats' neurocognitive functioning is similar to that of humans, Robinson said.
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