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The research, which took place in Germany, was part of a study into how artificial gravity might affect the body. Participants were paid €16,500 ($18,500), but not as it sounds. The 24 people selected spent 60 days laying down, with all experiments, meals, and leisure activities done while horizontal.
The experiment, however, is just one of many ways you can get paid for helping out with scientific research. If you want to aid the science community (and potentially save some lives) there are some unconventional yet potentially lucrative steps you can take.
Below is a short list, though be warned: these strategies aren't all easy money.
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Lie in bed for 60 days straight as part of NASA research
A former NASA bed rest study participant visits with a guest at The University of Texas Medical Branch at the Galveston facility's Flight Analogs Research Unit.NASA
Sell your blood plasma.
Bags of blood plasma being examined in a laboratory.AP Images
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Sell your poop.
To participate in this project, you have to live near the Open Biome lab in Cambridge.Jon Bilous/Shutterstock
Donate your eggs.
Pichi Chuang/Reuters
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Donate your sperm.
Shutterstock
Become a surrogate mother by carrying a baby in your womb.
Surrogate mothers (L-R) Daksha, 37, Renuka, 23, and Rajia, 39, pose for a photograph inside a temporary home for surrogates provided by Akanksha IVF centre near the Indian city of Ahmedabad, August 27, 2013.REUTERS/Mansi Thapliyal
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Sign up for a paid clinical trials.
The NIH Clinical Center.NIH
Enroll in a psychological study.
Psychologist Viviana Vega (L) interviews Rodrigo Rocco, a public relations specialist, at a centre called Siestario in Buenos Aires, Argentina on July 6, 2010.Martin Acosta/Reuters
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Donate your bone marrow
Photo Essay At Nice University Hospital, Archet Hospital About Bone Marrow Donation. Laboratory Of Histocompatibility. Cellular Pellet.BSIP/UIG Via Getty Images
Give your dead body to science.
A group of students work on a cadaver in the gross anatomy lab at the medical school at Indiana University Northwest in Gary, Indiana onJuly 30, 2014.Associated Press/Stacy Thacker