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Child Neuropsychology
A Journal on Normal and Abnormal Development in Childhood and Adolescence
Volume 13, 2007 - Issue 3
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Original Articles

Prospective Memory and Pediatric Traumatic Brain Injury: Effects of Cognitive Demand

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Pages 219-239 | Received 21 Apr 2006, Accepted 13 Jul 2006, Published online: 13 Apr 2007
 

Abstract

This study investigated the effects of pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI) on prospective memory. Fourteen children and 14 adolescents with TBI were compared with 25 and 23 noninjured children and adolescents, respectively. Based on a prefrontal model, the cognitive demand on the ongoing component of a prospective-memory task was manipulated. Overall, those with TBI had poorer prospective-memory performance than their noninjured peers. Performance was worse in a high cognitive-demand condition than a low, and younger children performed worse than adolescents. Decreases in performance from the low- to high-demand conditions were not significantly different between the two children's groups but were between the two adolescents' groups. Furthermore, the age and injury effects were reflected in the performances on executive function tests: the Self-ordered Pointing Task (SOPT), and the Stroop Color Word Interference Test. The Tower of London (TOL), which did not produce age or injury effects, was nevertheless found to be an important predictor of performance on the high-demand task in those with TBI. Although previous research has demonstrated impaired prospective memory performance in children with TBI, this study attempted to explain why this might occur, specifically that the prefrontal regions might be implicated.

Notes

1Note that unequal tasks are commonly used when comparing children of different ages (see for example, CitationHitch, Halliday, Schaafstal, & Schraagen, 1988; CitationHitch, Woodin, & Baker, 1989). In fact, CitationDiamond (1991, p. 352) stated that “sometimes a task must be modified in order for it to measure the same ability in a different population.”

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