Clough Sharice, Evans Melissa J, Duff Melissa C, Brown-Schmidt Sarah
Multimodal Language Department, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, the Netherlands; Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, United States; Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of Iowa, United States.
Department of Psychology and Human Development, Vanderbilt University, United States.
Cortex. 2025 Jul 1;190:86-109. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2025.06.007.
Narrative discourse impairments are well documented in individuals with moderate-severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). Studies of narrative discourse (i.e., story generation, story retelling) in this population have frequently focused on impairment of semantic relations across utterances and the larger discourse context (e.g., cohesion, coherence, story grammar). Less attention has been given to the temporal organization of narrative retelling in TBI. We applied temporal contiguity analyses, a technique traditionally used to characterize temporal organization of free recall of wordlists, to quantify the temporal organization of participants' story retellings with respect to the order in which the narrator originally presented the story details. We also conducted a parallel analysis of temporal contiguity of wordlist recall using data from the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning test. Participants with moderate-severe TBI and non-injured peers demonstrated above chance temporal organization and a tendency to make short transitions in the forward direction when recalling items in both the narrative recall and wordlist recall task. However, these effects were significantly reduced in the TBI group. Overall, their free recall performance was less temporally clustered, and they were more likely to make larger jumps between story details (or words in the wordlist recall task) than their non-injured peers when recalling stories. Examining free recall at multiple timepoints revealed that while repetition (i.e., multiple presentations of the wordlist) increased temporal organization of recall, long delays (i.e., one week) decreased temporal organization for both the TBI and non-injured groups. We propose that reduced temporal organization of narrative recall in individuals with moderate-severe TBI is linked to impairments in the declarative relational memory system. In line with retrieved-context models of free recall, memory disruption not only impacts the total number of story details recalled, but also the ability to use temporal context to encode and retrieve items in a sequentially organized way.
中度至重度创伤性脑损伤(TBI)患者的叙事话语障碍已有充分记录。对这一人群的叙事话语(即故事生成、故事复述)研究常常聚焦于跨语句的语义关系以及更大的话语语境(如衔接、连贯、故事语法)的损伤。对TBI患者叙事复述的时间组织关注较少。我们应用了时间邻接性分析,这是一种传统上用于刻画单词列表自由回忆时间组织的技术,以根据叙述者最初呈现故事细节的顺序来量化参与者故事复述的时间组织。我们还使用雷伊听觉词语学习测试的数据对单词列表回忆的时间邻接性进行了平行分析。中度至重度TBI患者和未受伤的同龄人在叙事回忆和单词列表回忆任务中回忆项目时,都表现出高于机会水平的时间组织,并且有向前方向进行短过渡的倾向。然而,TBI组的这些效应显著降低。总体而言,他们的自由回忆表现时间上聚类较少,并且在回忆故事时比未受伤的同龄人更有可能在故事细节(或单词列表回忆任务中的单词)之间进行更大的跳跃。在多个时间点检查自由回忆发现,虽然重复(即多次呈现单词列表)增加了回忆的时间组织,但长时间延迟(即一周)会降低TBI组和未受伤组的时间组织。我们提出,中度至重度TBI患者叙事回忆的时间组织减少与陈述性关系记忆系统的损伤有关。与自由回忆的检索情境模型一致,记忆破坏不仅影响回忆的故事细节总数,还影响以顺序组织的方式使用时间背景来编码和检索项目的能力。