Literature DB >> 15562406

Verbal selective learning after traumatic brain injury in children.

Gerri Hanten1, Sandra B Chapman, Jacquelyn F Gamino, Lifang Zhang, Shelley Black Benton, Garland Stallings-Roberson, Jill V Hunter, Harvey S Levin.   

Abstract

Selective learning (SL), the ability to select items to learn from among other items, engages cognitive control, which is purportedly mediated by the frontal cortex and its circuitry. Using incentive-based auditory word recall and expository discourse tasks, we studied the efficiency of SL in children ages 6 to 16 years who had sustained severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) at least 1 year earlier. We hypothesized that SL would be compromised by severe TBI. Results indicated that children with severe TBI performed significantly worse than age-matched typically developing children on word- and discourse-level measures of SL efficiency with no significant group differences in number of items recalled from auditory word lists or declarative facts. We conclude that severe TBI disrupts incentive-based cognitive control processes, possibly due to involvement of frontal neural networks.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15562406     DOI: 10.1002/ana.20298

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Neurol        ISSN: 0364-5134            Impact factor:   10.422


  9 in total

1.  The development of memory efficiency and value-directed remembering across the life span: a cross-sectional study of memory and selectivity.

Authors:  Alan D Castel; Kathryn L Humphreys; Steve S Lee; Adriana Galván; David A Balota; David P McCabe
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2011-09-26

2.  Effects of traumatic brain injury on a virtual reality social problem solving task and relations to cortical thickness in adolescence.

Authors:  Gerri Hanten; Lori Cook; Kimberley Orsten; Sandra B Chapman; Xiaoqi Li; Elisabeth A Wilde; Kathleen P Schnelle; Harvey S Levin
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2010-12-13       Impact factor: 3.139

3.  Memory efficiency and the strategic control of attention at encoding: impairments of value-directed remembering in Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  Alan D Castel; David A Balota; David P McCabe
Journal:  Neuropsychology       Date:  2009-05       Impact factor: 3.295

4.  Efficacy of Cognitive Training When Translated From the Laboratory to the Real World.

Authors:  Leanne R Young; Jennifer E Zientz; Jeffrey S Spence; Daniel C Krawczyk; Sandra B Chapman
Journal:  Mil Med       Date:  2021-01-25       Impact factor: 1.437

5.  Memory and selective learning in children with spina bifida-myelomeningocele and shunted hydrocephalus: a preliminary study.

Authors:  Behroze Vachha; Richard C Adams
Journal:  Cerebrospinal Fluid Res       Date:  2005-11-17

6.  Evaluating the effectiveness of reasoning training in military and civilian chronic traumatic brain injury patients: study protocol.

Authors:  Daniel C Krawczyk; Carlos Marquez de la Plata; Guido F Schauer; Asha K Vas; Molly Keebler; Stephanie Tuthill; Claire Gardner; Tiffani Jantz; Weikei Yu; Sandra B Chapman
Journal:  Trials       Date:  2013-01-30       Impact factor: 2.279

7.  Altered Amygdala Connectivity in Individuals with Chronic Traumatic Brain Injury and Comorbid Depressive Symptoms.

Authors:  Kihwan Han; Sandra B Chapman; Daniel C Krawczyk
Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2015-11-04       Impact factor: 4.003

8.  Disrupted Intrinsic Connectivity among Default, Dorsal Attention, and Frontoparietal Control Networks in Individuals with Chronic Traumatic Brain Injury.

Authors:  Kihwan Han; Sandra B Chapman; Daniel C Krawczyk
Journal:  J Int Neuropsychol Soc       Date:  2016-02       Impact factor: 2.892

9.  Influential Cognitive Processes on Framing Biases in Aging.

Authors:  Alison M Perez; Jeffrey Scott Spence; L D Kiel; Erin E Venza; Sandra B Chapman
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2018-05-11
  9 in total

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