As an explanation of the pattern of slow information processing after closed head injury (CHI), hypotheses of impaired access to declarative memory and intact application and acquisition of procedural memory after CHI are presented. These two hypotheses were tested by means of four cognitive reaction-time tasks, a semantic memory task, a memory comparison task, a mental rotation task and a mirror reading task. These tasks were administered on two different days to 12 survivors of a CHI tested more than 5 years after injury and a healthy control group of comparable age and education. In three tasks the difficulty of access to declarative knowledge was varied and it was expected that this would slow the CHI group more than the controls. In tw...
After severe traumatic brain injury, patients almost invariably demonstrate a slowing of reaction ti...
Following a closed head injury patients undergo extensive programs in rehabilitation or relearning. ...
This study investigated the basic mechanisms of the impairment of memory for actions to be performed...
As an explanation of the pattern of slow information processing after closed head injury (CHI), hypo...
peer reviewedSurvivors of severe closed-head injury (CHI) frequently suffer from slowed information ...
One of the most persisting sequelae of closed head injury (CHI) is a general slowing of information ...
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...
The performance of a group of 60 severely closed-head-injured patients in the subacute stage of reco...
Closed head injury (CHI) typically results in diffuse damage to the brain with particular damage to ...
Event-related potentials may offer more precision than behavioural measures for understanding the ex...
This study was aimed at investigating long-term forgetting in chronic survivors of severe closed-hea...
The present study, based on Sternberg's (1969) additive-factor method, examined attentional processe...
Patients after severe closed-head injury (CHI) demonstrate reduced ability to spontaneously utilize ...
After severe traumatic brain injury, patients almost invariably demonstrate a slowing of reaction ti...
Following a closed head injury patients undergo extensive programs in rehabilitation or relearning. ...
This study investigated the basic mechanisms of the impairment of memory for actions to be performed...
As an explanation of the pattern of slow information processing after closed head injury (CHI), hypo...
peer reviewedSurvivors of severe closed-head injury (CHI) frequently suffer from slowed information ...
One of the most persisting sequelae of closed head injury (CHI) is a general slowing of information ...
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...
The performance of a group of 60 severely closed-head-injured patients in the subacute stage of reco...
Closed head injury (CHI) typically results in diffuse damage to the brain with particular damage to ...
Event-related potentials may offer more precision than behavioural measures for understanding the ex...
This study was aimed at investigating long-term forgetting in chronic survivors of severe closed-hea...
The present study, based on Sternberg's (1969) additive-factor method, examined attentional processe...
Patients after severe closed-head injury (CHI) demonstrate reduced ability to spontaneously utilize ...
After severe traumatic brain injury, patients almost invariably demonstrate a slowing of reaction ti...
Following a closed head injury patients undergo extensive programs in rehabilitation or relearning. ...
This study investigated the basic mechanisms of the impairment of memory for actions to be performed...