Publications by authors named "Christopher J Cagna"

Background: Performance feedback is vital to rehabilitation interventions that treat cognitive impairments from multiple sclerosis (MS). Optimal treatment relies on participants' motivation to learn from feedback throughout these interventions. Cognitive fatigue, a prevalent symptom of MS, is associated with aberrant reward processing, which necessitates research into how fatigue affects perceived reward value of feedback in these individuals.

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Effective learning from performance feedback is vital for adaptive behavior regulation necessary for successful cognitive performance. Yet, how this learning operates in clinical groups that experience cognitive dysfunction is not well understood. Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an autoimmune, degenerative disease of the central nervous system characterized by physical and cognitive dysfunction.

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It has recently been reported that individuals with multiple sclerosis (MS) are impaired on tasks requiring emotional processing and social cognition, including tasks of Theory of Mind (ToM) and facial affect recognition. The current pilot study examined the ability of individuals with MS to understand and interpret lies and sarcasm using a dynamic task: The Awareness of Social Inference Test (TASIT). Fifteen individuals with MS and 15 healthy controls (HCs) performed the Social Inference-Enriched subtest of the TASIT, in which they viewed video-taped social interactions in which lies and sarcasm are presented.

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