Measuring Executive Function Deficits Following Head Injury: An Application of SMS Simulation Technology

Detecting and characterizing residual "real life" cognitive difficulties can be problematic for treatment purposes…

Neuropsychological tests have limited sensitivity in identifying subtle residual cognitive impairments in patients with good medical recovery from head injury and post-concussive syndrome. Twenty adults who had suffered moderate closed head injury (CHI) but now generated normal or close to normal neuropsychological test scores, yet continued to experience family, work, or other problems, were compared with matched controls.

Comparisons of the patient and control group on simulation scores indicated no significant differences for single, well-structured task components or for information search activity. In contrast, the CHI sample was impaired on numerous tasks that require intermediate or complex cognitive efforts. The CHI sample generated significantly lower performance scores for strategic functioning, activity levels, information utilization, emergency responsiveness, planning, and breadth of decision-making.


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Impact of Allergic Rhinitis on Simulated Real-World Performance

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Impact of Indoor Air Quality (Ventilation) On Human Decision-Making and Productivity