Identifier

etd-07072004-131623

Degree

Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Department

Psychology

Document Type

Dissertation

Abstract

Introduction: The majority of individuals experiencing a mild head injury (MHI) recover fully experiencing few residual symptoms. Some individuals who fully recover have shown evidence of residual, albeit subtle, brain functioning disturbances on tasks requiring high levels of cognitive effort. Also, memory complaints in MHI patients may be related to these subtle difficulties when cognitive resources are overwhelmed. This study assessed a group of asymptomatic college students with a history of MHI to determine if there were any residual attention difficulties as well as increased memory complaints. Method: One-hundred twelve college students with and without a history of MHI were administered several tests of attention. Participants were randomly assigned to a standard administration or distraction condition where they were exposed to distracting auditory stimuli. Memory complaints and subjective assessment of performance were collected after testing. Results: The MHI group showed significantly poorer performance on Trailmaking Test part A while under conditions of auditory distraction. There were no other differences between MHI and controls in the expected direction, but performance was slightly higher in the MHI group on Digit Span Backward and Symbol Search. There were no differences between MHI and controls for reported memory complaints, but the MHI group reported higher levels of stress when tested under distraction conditions. Conclusions: Even under distraction conditions, the MHI group performed within the average range across all measures of attention and were highly similar to a well-matched control group. Memory complaints were slightly higher in the MHI group tested under distraction conditions compared to the head-injured participants tested under standard conditions.

Date

2004

Document Availability at the Time of Submission

Release the entire work immediately for access worldwide.

Committee Chair

Drew Gouvier

DOI

10.31390/gradschool_dissertations.2880

Included in

Psychology Commons

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