Increased risk for age-related impairment in visual attention associated with mild traumatic brain injury: Evidence from saccadic response times.

It was hypothesized that risk for age-related impairment in attention would be greater among those with remote history of mild TBI than individuals without history of head injury. Twenty-seven adults with remote history of mild TBI and a well-matched comparison group of 54 uninjured controls complet...

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Main Authors: Jamie N Hershaw, David M Barry, Mark L Ettenhofer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5293243?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-9d69d5f7d14d48d9a0ef49e5c5072d222020-11-25T02:10:40ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01122e017175210.1371/journal.pone.0171752Increased risk for age-related impairment in visual attention associated with mild traumatic brain injury: Evidence from saccadic response times.Jamie N HershawDavid M BarryMark L EttenhoferIt was hypothesized that risk for age-related impairment in attention would be greater among those with remote history of mild TBI than individuals without history of head injury. Twenty-seven adults with remote history of mild TBI and a well-matched comparison group of 54 uninjured controls completed a computerized test of visual attention while saccadic and manual response times were recorded. Within the mild TBI group only, older age was associated with slower saccadic responses and poorer saccadic inhibition. Saccadic slowing was mitigated in situations where the timing and location of attention targets was fully predictable. Mild TBI was not associated with age-related increases in risk for neuropsychological impairment or neurobehavioral symptoms. These results provide preliminary evidence that risk for age-related impairment in visual attention may be higher among those with a history of mild TBI. Saccadic measures may provide enhanced sensitivity to this subtle form of cognitive impairment.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5293243?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jamie N Hershaw
David M Barry
Mark L Ettenhofer
spellingShingle Jamie N Hershaw
David M Barry
Mark L Ettenhofer
Increased risk for age-related impairment in visual attention associated with mild traumatic brain injury: Evidence from saccadic response times.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jamie N Hershaw
David M Barry
Mark L Ettenhofer
author_sort Jamie N Hershaw
title Increased risk for age-related impairment in visual attention associated with mild traumatic brain injury: Evidence from saccadic response times.
title_short Increased risk for age-related impairment in visual attention associated with mild traumatic brain injury: Evidence from saccadic response times.
title_full Increased risk for age-related impairment in visual attention associated with mild traumatic brain injury: Evidence from saccadic response times.
title_fullStr Increased risk for age-related impairment in visual attention associated with mild traumatic brain injury: Evidence from saccadic response times.
title_full_unstemmed Increased risk for age-related impairment in visual attention associated with mild traumatic brain injury: Evidence from saccadic response times.
title_sort increased risk for age-related impairment in visual attention associated with mild traumatic brain injury: evidence from saccadic response times.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description It was hypothesized that risk for age-related impairment in attention would be greater among those with remote history of mild TBI than individuals without history of head injury. Twenty-seven adults with remote history of mild TBI and a well-matched comparison group of 54 uninjured controls completed a computerized test of visual attention while saccadic and manual response times were recorded. Within the mild TBI group only, older age was associated with slower saccadic responses and poorer saccadic inhibition. Saccadic slowing was mitigated in situations where the timing and location of attention targets was fully predictable. Mild TBI was not associated with age-related increases in risk for neuropsychological impairment or neurobehavioral symptoms. These results provide preliminary evidence that risk for age-related impairment in visual attention may be higher among those with a history of mild TBI. Saccadic measures may provide enhanced sensitivity to this subtle form of cognitive impairment.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5293243?pdf=render
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AT marklettenhofer increasedriskforagerelatedimpairmentinvisualattentionassociatedwithmildtraumaticbraininjuryevidencefromsaccadicresponsetimes
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