Impaired discourse gist and working memory in children after brain injury

Emerging evidence suggests that a traumatic brain injury (TBI) in childhood may disrupt the ability to abstract the central meaning or gist-based memory from connected language (discourse). The current study adopts a novel approach to elucidate the role of immediate and working memory processes in p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain and language 2006-05, Vol.97 (2), p.178-188
Hauptverfasser: Chapman, Sandra B., Gamino, Jacquelyn F., Cook, Lori G., Hanten, Gerri, Li, Xiaoqi, Levin, Harvey S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Emerging evidence suggests that a traumatic brain injury (TBI) in childhood may disrupt the ability to abstract the central meaning or gist-based memory from connected language (discourse). The current study adopts a novel approach to elucidate the role of immediate and working memory processes in producing a cohesive and coherent gist-based text in the form of a summary in children with mild and severe TBI as compared to typically developing children, ages 8–14 years at test. Both TBI groups showed decreased performance on a summary production task as well as retrieval of specific content from a long narrative. Working memory on n-back tasks was also impaired in children with severe TBI, whereas immediate memory performance for recall of a simple word list in both TBI groups was comparable to controls. Interestingly, working memory, but not simple immediate memory for a word list, was significantly correlated with summarization ability and ability to recall discourse content.
ISSN:0093-934X
1090-2155
DOI:10.1016/j.bandl.2005.10.002