Mangels Jennifer A, Craik Fergus I M, Levine Brian, Schwartz Michael L, Stuss Donald T
Department of Psychology, Schermerhorn Hall, Columbia University, 1190 Amsterdam Avenue, New York, NY 10027, USA.
Neuropsychologia. 2002;40(13):2369-85. doi: 10.1016/s0028-3932(02)00084-2.
Eleven patients with mild traumatic brain injury (MTBI) and 13 patients with moderate-to-severe TBI (STBI) were compared to 10 matched controls on episodic memory for pictorial scene-object associations (e.g. kitchen-bread) and a range of standardized neuropsychological tests of memory and frontal-lobe functions. We tested the hypothesis that deficits in episodic memory result from impaired attentional resources and/or strategic control by manipulating attentional load at encoding (focused versus divided attention) and environmental support at retrieval (free recall and recalled cued by scene versus recognition of object and scene). Patients with TBI were disproportionately affected by the divided attention manipulation, but this effect was modulated by injury severity and encoding strategy. Overall, MTBI patients were impaired only when items were encoded under divided attention, indicating memory deficits that were secondary to deficits in the executive control. STBI patients could be differentiated into two distinct functional subgroups based on whether they favored a strategy of attending to the encoding or digit-monitoring task. The subgroup favoring the digit-monitoring task demonstrated deficits in the focused attention condition, and disproportionate memory deficits in the divided attention condition. In contrast, the subgroup favoring the encoding task demonstrated intact performance across all memory measures, regardless of attentional load, and despite remarkable similarity to the other STBI subgroup on demographic, neuropsychological, and acute injury severity measures. We discuss these outcome differences in terms of the relationship between strategy and executive control and highlight the need for more sensitive anatomical and behavioral measurement at both acute and chronic stages of injury.
将11名轻度创伤性脑损伤(MTBI)患者和13名中重度创伤性脑损伤(STBI)患者与10名匹配的对照组进行比较,比较他们对图片场景 - 对象关联(如厨房 - 面包)的情景记忆,以及一系列标准化的记忆和额叶功能神经心理学测试。我们通过在编码时操纵注意力负荷(集中注意力与分散注意力)以及在检索时操纵环境支持(自由回忆、由场景提示回忆与对象和场景识别)来检验情景记忆缺陷是由注意力资源受损和/或策略控制受损导致的这一假设。TBI患者受到分散注意力操纵的影响尤为严重,但这种影响受损伤严重程度和编码策略的调节。总体而言,MTBI患者仅在分散注意力条件下对项目进行编码时存在损伤,表明记忆缺陷是执行控制缺陷的继发结果。STBI患者可根据他们倾向于关注编码任务还是数字监测任务分为两个不同的功能亚组。倾向于数字监测任务的亚组在集中注意力条件下表现出缺陷,在分散注意力条件下存在不成比例的记忆缺陷。相比之下,倾向于编码任务的亚组在所有记忆测量中表现完好,无论注意力负荷如何,尽管在人口统计学、神经心理学和急性损伤严重程度测量方面与其他STBI亚组非常相似。我们根据策略与执行控制之间的关系讨论这些结果差异,并强调在损伤的急性和慢性阶段都需要更敏感的解剖学和行为测量。