(János Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.)
(ÚNKP-23-5-BME- 431)
(TKP2021) Támogató: NKFIH
Szakterületek:
Neuropszichológia és kognitív pszichológia
A large body of evidence suggests that individuals with traumatic brain injury (TBI)
have significant difficulties with prospective memory (PM), the memory for future
intentions. However, the processes underlying this cognitive deficit remain unclear.
This study aimed to gather further evidence regarding PM functions in TBI and clarify
the role of neuropsychological deficits, metamemory, and mood disorders. We used a
laboratory‐based clinical measure, the Virtual Week, to examine PM function in 18
patients with TBI and 18 healthy control subjects. Measures of attention, processing
speed, executive functions, episodic memory, and self‐report questionnaires were also
administered. In line with prior literature, our findings indicate that individuals
with TBI had a consistent deficit compared to controls across all PM tasks. In previous
studies, TBI patients had more severe impairment on time‐based tasks; nevertheless,
our results show that across all participants event‐based tasks were easier to perform
compared to time‐based only when the retrospective memory demand was high. The patients
were not only impaired on the prospective component of PM but also failed to recognise
the content of their task (the retrospective component). Interestingly, the TBI group
did not report higher levels of everyday memory problems, anxiety and depression compared
to the control group. These measures also failed to correlate with PM and recognition
memory performance. This study found that besides the neuropsychological deficits,
a global impairment in PM functioning is present in individuals with TBI across various
task types, tasks low and high in retrospective demands, and event versus time‐based.