Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States; Neuroscience Training Program and Department of Surgery, University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States.
Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States.
Neuropsychologia. 2018 Mar;111:117-122. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2018.01.016. Epub 2018 Jan 31.
To replicate a previous study of Theory of Mind (ToM) task performance in adults with traumatic brain injury (TBI) under different working memory (WM) demands, and determine if there are sex-based differences in effects of WM load on ToM task performance.
58 adults with moderate-severe TBI (24 females) and 66 uninjured adults (34 females) matched group-wise for age, sex, and education viewed a series of video vignettes from the Video Social Inference Task (VSIT) (Turkstra, 2008) and answered ToM questions. Vignette presentation format required updating and maintenance of information, and WM load was manipulated by varying presence of distracters.
There were main effects of group and WM load, no significant effect of sex, and a marginal interaction of group by WM load, with larger between-group differences in conditions with higher WM load. VSIT scores for the condition with the highest WM load were significantly correlated with scores on the first trial of the California Verbal Learning Test.
We replicated findings of lower scores in adults with TBI on a video-based ToM task, and provided additional evidence of the effect of WM load on social cognition task performance. There were no significant accuracy differences between men and women, inconsistent with prior evidence - including our own data using the same test. There is strong evidence of a female advantage on other social cognition tasks, and the parameters of this advantage remain to be discovered.
复制先前关于创伤性脑损伤(TBI)成年人在不同工作记忆(WM)需求下的心理理论(ToM)任务表现的研究,并确定 WM 负荷对 ToM 任务表现的影响是否存在性别差异。
58 名中度至重度 TBI 成年人(24 名女性)和 66 名未受伤成年人(34 名女性)按年龄、性别和教育进行了组间匹配,观看了一系列来自视频社交推理任务(VSIT)(Turkstra,2008)的视频片段,并回答了 ToM 问题。片段呈现格式需要更新和维护信息,WM 负荷通过改变干扰物的存在来操纵。
存在组和 WM 负荷的主要影响,性别无显著影响,组和 WM 负荷的交互作用微弱,WM 负荷较高时的组间差异较大。WM 负荷最高条件下的 VSIT 分数与加利福尼亚语言学习测试的第一次试验的分数显著相关。
我们复制了 TBI 成年人在基于视频的 ToM 任务中得分较低的发现,并提供了更多关于 WM 负荷对社会认知任务表现影响的证据。在男性和女性之间,没有显著的准确性差异,这与先前的证据不一致,包括我们自己使用相同测试的结果。在其他社会认知任务中存在强烈的女性优势,而这种优势的参数仍有待发现。