Abstract

Adolescents with traumatic brain injury (TBI) typically demonstrate good recovery of previously acquired skills. However, higher-order and later emergent cognitive functions are often impaired and linked to poor outcomes in academic and social/behavioral domains. Few control trials exist that test cognitive treatment effectiveness at chronic recovery stages. The current pilot study compared the effects of two forms of cognitive training, gist reasoning (top-down) versus rote memory learning (bottom-up), on ability to abstract meanings, recall facts, and utilize core executive functions (i.e., working memory, inhibition) in 20 adolescents (ages 12–20) who were 6 months or longer post-TBI. Participants completed eight 45-min sessions over 1 month. After training, the gist reasoning group (n = 10) exhibited significant improvement in ability to abstract meanings and increased fact recall. This group also showed significant generalizations to untrained executive functions of working memory and inhibition. The memory training group (n = 10) failed to show significant gains in ability to abstract meaning or on other untrained specialized executive functions, although improved fact recall approached significance. These preliminary results suggest that relatively short-term training (6 h) utilizing a top-down reasoning approach is more effective than a bottom-up rote learning approach in achieving gains in higher-order cognitive abilities in adolescents at chronic stages of TBI. These findings need to be replicated in a larger study; nonetheless, the preliminary data suggest that traditional cognitive intervention schedules need to extend to later-stage training opportunities. Chronic-stage, higher-order cognitive trainings may serve to elevate levels of cognitive performance in adolescents with TBI.

Highlights

  • Traumatic brain injury (TBI), defined as damage to the brain as a result of sudden trauma, is reported to be the most common cause of disability among youth in the United States today

  • Based on the evidence summarized above, we proposed that gist reasoning training (SMART) would enhance performance on the primary trained domain of abstracting meaning from complex information, and improve the ability to recall facts/details, an untrained aspect

  • The preliminary data suggest that traditional cognitive intervention models may need to be extended to later-stage training opportunities beyond the typical rehabilitation time for adolescents with TBI to achieve higher levels of cognitive performance at older ages

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Summary

Introduction

Traumatic brain injury (TBI), defined as damage to the brain as a result of sudden trauma, is reported to be the most common cause of disability among youth in the United States today. Of relevance to pediatric TBI is that an injury during this lengthy developmental course may disrupt the maturation of frontal functions that support higher-order cognitive outcomes [6,7,8] These difficulties may manifest as a neurocognitive stall [9]. Deficits may emerge in middle to upper grades, when many crucial frontal lobe functions are being called upon to navigate increased demands [5, 6, 9, 16, 17] These emerging or persistent higher-order cognitive deficits have been linked to poor outcomes in school performance and social and behavioral functioning [5]

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