AI Article Synopsis

  • Veterans with histories of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) struggle more with prospective memory (PM) tasks, which involve remembering to perform actions at specific times, especially when no external reminders are present.
  • A study compared clock-checking behavior during a PM test between Veterans with mTBI and those without, finding that those with mTBI checked the clock less often, which correlated with poorer performance on time-based tasks.
  • The findings suggest that the reduced ability to monitor time may contribute to mTBI-related challenges in managing time-based memories, highlighting a need for further research to explore its impact on daily activities like taking medications.

Article Abstract

Prospective memory (PM) or "remembering to remember" has been shown to be reduced in Veterans with histories of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), particularly on tasks with high strategic demands such as recalling time-based information in the absence of external cues. This study examined whether time monitoring during a PM task was reduced in Veterans with a history of mTBI and was associated with time-based PM performance. Veterans with a history of mTBI (n = 49) and Veterans without a history of TBI (n = 16) completed the Memory for Intentions Screening Test (MIST) as a measure of PM during which their time monitoring (i.e. number of clock checks) was recorded. Adjusting for age, education, depression, and PTSD symptoms, negative binomial regression revealed that the mTBI group checked the clock less frequently compared to the control group (Cohen's  = 0.84,  = 0.005). Within the mTBI group, less frequent time monitoring across the entire MIST task was associated with poorer time-based MIST performance ( = .57,  < 0.001), but not with event-based MIST ( = .04,  = 0.768). Veterans with a history of mTBI evidenced significantly reduced time monitoring during a PM task compared to Veterans without a history mTBI, which was associated with strategically-demanding PM. Current findings provide that mTBI-associated difficulties with strategic aspects of PM may be due to reduced time monitoring. Future studies are needed to determine if reduced time monitoring also contributes to mTBI-associated PM difficulties in the real-world (e.g. medication non-adherence).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13854046.2022.2068455DOI Listing

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