轻度颅脑损伤后精神疲劳时的分心

J. B
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引用次数: 1

摘要

大多数创伤性脑损伤是轻微的,但许多人患有长期的精神疲劳和认知障碍。尽管患者发表了评论,但认知困难可能未被发现。分散注意力是常见的报告,但很少包括在标准的神经心理学评估中。这项研究旨在调查mTBI后精神疲劳患者在自上而下和自下而上的注意力中分心可能引起的影响。30名患有精神疲劳的mTBI患者和30名健康对照者进行了一项计算机化测试,包括简单反应时间、选择反应时间和带有显著干扰物的注意力捕捉任务。mTBI组的所有子测试都发现处理速度较慢,尤其是决策任务。分心刺激降低了两组的处理速度,而mTBI组在出现分心物时会有更多的遗漏,表明分心性增加。然而,自上而下和自下而上的注意力没有发现任何影响。分心物存在时的反应时间是心理疲劳的预测因素,而抑郁和焦虑则不是,这表明仔细区分情绪困扰和心理疲劳的重要性。总之,有人认为,mTBI后出现精神疲劳的人处理信息的速度较慢,当任务中增加认知需求时,这一点更为明显。分散注意力的过程中有更多的遗漏,但没有发现自上而下和自下而上的系统之间的区别。需要进一步的研究来更好地理解脑损伤后注意力分散和精神疲劳之间的联系。
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Distractibility When Suffering from Mental Fatigue after a Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
Most Traumatic Brain Injuries are mild (mTBI) yet many people suffer from long-term mental fatigue and cognitive impairment. Despite comments from patients, cognitive difficulties can go undetected. Distractibility is commonly reported but is seldom included in standard neuropsychological assessment. This study was designed to investigate the effect distraction may induce in topdown and bottom-up attention among people who suffer from mental fatigue after mTBI. Thirty mTBI patients suffering from mental fatigue and 30 healthy controls performed a computerized test, including Simple Reaction Time, Choice Reaction Time and Attentional Capture tasks with a salient distractor. A slower processing speed was found in all subtests for the mTBI group and was particularly noticeable for the decision-making task. The distraction stimulus reduced processing speed for both groups, while the mTBI group made more omissions when a distractor emerged, indicating increased distractibility. However, no effect in top-down and bottom-up attention was found. Response time in the presence of a distractor was a predictor for mental fatigue, while depression and anxiety were not, showing the importance to carefully distinguish between emotional distress and mental fatigue. In conclusion, it is suggested that people suffering from mental fatigue after mTBI are slower at processing information, and this is more pronounced when a cognitive demand is added to the task. Distractibility was indicated with more omissions during distraction, but a distinction between top-down and bottom-up systems was not found. Further research is needed to better understand the link between distractibility and mental fatigue after a brain injury.
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