Authors
Timothy E Ham, Valerie Bonnelle, Peter Hellyer, Sagar Jilka, Ian H Robertson, Robert Leech, David J Sharp
Publication date
2014/2/1
Journal
Brain
Volume
137
Issue
2
Pages
586-597
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Self-awareness is commonly impaired after traumatic brain injury. This is an important clinical issue as awareness affects long-term outcome and limits attempts at rehabilitation. It can be investigated by studying how patients respond to their errors and monitor their performance on tasks. As awareness is thought to be an emergent property of network activity, we tested the hypothesis that impaired self-awareness is associated with abnormal brain network function. We investigated a group of subjects with traumatic brain injury (n = 63) split into low and high performance-monitoring groups based on their ability to recognize and correct their own errors. Brain network function was assessed using resting-state and event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging. This allowed us to investigate baseline network function, as well as the evoked response of networks to specific events including errors. The low …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
T Ham, V Bonnelle, T Barber, R Leech, K Kinnunen… - Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 2012