The performance of a group of 60 severely closed-head-injured patients in the subacute stage of recovery on a series of tests addressing focused, divided, and sustained attention, and supervisory attentional control was compared to the performance of a matched group of 60 healthy controls. Patients performed significantly worse on each test with time pressure (those addressing focused and divided attention), indicating basic slowness of information processing, and on the self-paced tasks for supervisory attentional control. No indication was found of a sustained attention deficit. In a subsequent analysis the influence of the demonstrated slowness of information processing and other possibly confounding cognitive factors was controlled for ...
Attentional problems have frequently been identified following traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) using...
As an explanation of the pattern of slow information processing after closed head injury (CHI), hypo...
As an explanation of the pattern of slow information processing after closed head injury (CHI), hypo...
The performance of a group of 60 severely closed-head-injured patients in the subacute stage of reco...
The performance of a group of 60 severely closed-head-injured patients in the subacute stage of reco...
The performance of a group of 60 severely closed-head-injured patients in the subacute stage of reco...
Central executive aspects of attention were investigated in a group of 20 closed head injury (CHI) p...
Central executive aspects of attention were investigated in a group of 20 closed head injury (CHI) p...
One of the most persisting sequelae of closed head injury (CHI) is a general slowing of information ...
One of the most persisting sequelae of closed head injury (CHI) is a general slowing of information ...
One of the most persisting sequelae of closed head injury (CHI) is a general slowing of information ...
One of the most persisting sequelae of closed head injury (CHI) is a general slowing of information ...
peer reviewedSurvivors of severe closed-head injury (CHI) frequently suffer from slowed information ...
peer reviewedSurvivors of severe closed-head injury (CHI) frequently suffer from slowed information ...
The present study, based on Sternberg's (1969) additive-factor method, examined attentional processe...
Attentional problems have frequently been identified following traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) using...
As an explanation of the pattern of slow information processing after closed head injury (CHI), hypo...
As an explanation of the pattern of slow information processing after closed head injury (CHI), hypo...
The performance of a group of 60 severely closed-head-injured patients in the subacute stage of reco...
The performance of a group of 60 severely closed-head-injured patients in the subacute stage of reco...
The performance of a group of 60 severely closed-head-injured patients in the subacute stage of reco...
Central executive aspects of attention were investigated in a group of 20 closed head injury (CHI) p...
Central executive aspects of attention were investigated in a group of 20 closed head injury (CHI) p...
One of the most persisting sequelae of closed head injury (CHI) is a general slowing of information ...
One of the most persisting sequelae of closed head injury (CHI) is a general slowing of information ...
One of the most persisting sequelae of closed head injury (CHI) is a general slowing of information ...
One of the most persisting sequelae of closed head injury (CHI) is a general slowing of information ...
peer reviewedSurvivors of severe closed-head injury (CHI) frequently suffer from slowed information ...
peer reviewedSurvivors of severe closed-head injury (CHI) frequently suffer from slowed information ...
The present study, based on Sternberg's (1969) additive-factor method, examined attentional processe...
Attentional problems have frequently been identified following traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) using...
As an explanation of the pattern of slow information processing after closed head injury (CHI), hypo...
As an explanation of the pattern of slow information processing after closed head injury (CHI), hypo...