Purpose: To examine how post-concussion changes to the N200 and P300 event-related potentials (ERPs) are associated with cognitive symptoms and neurocognitive performance.
Methods: High-density electroencephalography (EEG) was recorded during a Go/No-Go task from 16 young adults within one month after their concussion and 16 matched controls. Participants were also administered the Cognitive-Linguistic Quick Test (CLQT) and self-reported concussion-like symptoms. Mixed analysis of variance models compared the N200/P300 ERPs between concussion and control groups. Nested linear regressions examined associations between the N200/P300 ERPs and CLQT cognitive domains, cognitive symptom clusters, and total concussion symptoms, with particular interest in within-task changes in the N200/P300 ERPs (e.g. habituation).
Results: N200 and P300 ERP amplitudes were associated with individual differences in cognitive outcomes after concussion. For concussion participants only, smaller P300 amplitudes were significantly associated with greater cognitive symptoms. When considering within-task changes in ERPs over repeated trial presentations, reduced habituation of N200 amplitudes was significantly associated with poorer attention and memory CLQT domain scores. Reduced habituation of P300 amplitudes was also associated with greater cognitive symptoms and total symptoms for concussion participants.
Conclusion: Within-task changes in ERP dynamics supporting attention and executive control are associated with individual differences in cognitive outcomes after concussion.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02699052.2024.2435947 | DOI Listing |
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