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J Int Neuropsychol Soc · Sep 2004
Comparative StudyParametric manipulation of working memory load in traumatic brain injury: behavioral and neural correlates.
- William M Perlstein, Michael A Cole, Jason A Demery, Paul J Seignourel, Neha K Dixit, Michael J Larson, and Richard W Briggs.
- Department of Clinical and Health Psychology, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32610, USA. wmp@grove.ufl.edu
- J Int Neuropsychol Soc. 2004 Sep 1; 10 (5): 724-41.
AbstractTraumatic brain injury (TBI) is often associated with enduring impairments in high-level cognitive functioning, including working memory (WM). We examined WM function in predominantly chronic patients with mild, moderate and severe TBI and healthy comparison subjects behaviorally and, in a small subset of moderate-to-severe TBI patients, with event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), using a visual n-back task that parametrically varied WM load. TBI patients showed severity-dependent and load-related WM deficits in performance accuracy, but not reaction time. Performance of mild TBI patients did not differ from controls; patients with moderate and severe TBI were impaired, relative to controls and mild TBI patients, but only at higher WM-load levels. fMRI results show that TBI patients exhibit altered patterns of activation in a number of WM-related brain regions, including the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and Broca's area. Examination of the pattern of behavioral responding and the temporal course of activations suggests that WM deficits in moderate-to-severe TBI are due to associative or strategic aspects of WM, and not impairments in active maintenance of stimulus representations. Overall, results demonstrate that individuals with moderate-to-severe TBI exhibit WM deficits that are associated with dysfunction within a distributed network of brain regions that support verbally mediated WM.
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