1 Neurocognitive Correlates of Oculomotor Performance among U.S. Military Personnel with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

Objective:To examine neurocognitive correlates of oculomotor performance among U.S. military personnel with history of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI).Participants and Methods:A series of studies (total n=356) were conducted to examine saccadic eye movements and manual button presses collected in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society 2023-11, Vol.29 (s1), p.666-667
Hauptverfasser: Ettenhofer, Mark L, Gimbel, Sarah I., Trotta, Jenna K., Agtarap, Stephanie, Hungerford, Lars D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective:To examine neurocognitive correlates of oculomotor performance among U.S. military personnel with history of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI).Participants and Methods:A series of studies (total n=356) were conducted to examine saccadic eye movements and manual button presses collected in response to attention stimuli, and to compare these findings to the results of standardized neuropsychological tests. Study 1 included n=27 with remote mTBI and n=54 controls who completed the Bethesda Eye and Attention Measure (BEAM), an eye tracking task that was designed to measure visual attention and executive function. In Study 2, n=51 with chronic mTBI and n=33 controls completed the Fusion n-Back task, an eye tracking task that was designed to assess the impact of working memory load on visual attention performance. Study 3 examined psychometric characteristics of BEAM among n=191 military personnel with remote mTBI. In all studies, participants completed eye tracking tasks, a structured TBI diagnostic interview, and a brief battery of standardized neuropsychological tests.Results:In Study 1, BEAM saccadic and manual metrics demonstrated strong reliability and high sensitivity to multiple cognitive cues designed to elicit spatial orienting, temporal alerting, executive interference, perceptual release (gap) and inhibition (n2p=.76, p
ISSN:1355-6177
1469-7661
DOI:10.1017/S135561772300838X