Imagining the Future in Children with Severe Traumatic Brain Injury.

J Neurotrauma

3 Brain Injury Rehabilitation Program, Rehab2Kids, Sydney Children's Hospital, Randwick, Randwick, New South Wales, Australia .

Published: September 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Future events depend on combining past memories, but severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) may affect this process.
  • Research showed that children with severe TBI recalled fewer details from past events compared to healthy controls but generated future events similarly.
  • Observations indicated a disconnect where TBI kids remembered less from the past, yet were capable of constructing future scenarios, raising questions for further study.

Article Abstract

Imagining future events is thought to rely on recombination and integration of past episodic memory traces into future events. Future and past events contain episodic and nonepisodic details. Children with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) were found to have impaired recall of past episodic (but not semantic) event details. Here, we examined whether severe TBI impairs construction of future events. Children with severe TBI (n = 15) and healthy controls (NC; n = 33) 1) completed tests of anterograde (narrative and relational) memory and executive skills, 2) recalled past events and generated future events, and 3) rated events' phenomenological qualities. Events were scored for episodic (internal) and semantic (external) details. The groups did not differ in generating details of future events, although children with TBI recalled significantly fewer past internal (but not external) events' details relative to NCs. Moreover, the number of past internal details relative to future internal details was significantly higher in the NC group, but not in the TBI groups. Significant correlations between past and future were found for 1) internal details in both groups and 2) external details in the NC group. The TBI group rated their events as being less significant than did the NC group. The groups did not differ on ratings of visual intensity and rehearsal. Our study has shown that children who have sustained severe TBI had impoverished recall of past, but not generation of future, events. This unexpected dissociation between past and future event construction requires further research.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/neu.2017.5250DOI Listing

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