Traumatic brain injury alters the relationship between brain structure and episodic memory

Author:

Taing Abbie S.12ORCID,Mundy Matthew E.3,Ponsford Jennie L.12,Spitz Gershon12

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychological Sciences, Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health Monash University Clayton Victoria Australia

2. Monash Epworth Rehabilitation Research Centre Richmond Victoria Australia

3. Faculty of Health and Education Torrens University Melbourne Victoria Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundFocal and diffuse pathology resulting from traumatic brain injury (TBI) often disrupts brain circuitry that is critical for episodic memory, including medial temporal lobe and prefrontal regions. Prior studies have focused on unitary accounts of temporal lobe function, associating verbally learned material and brain morphology. Medial temporal lobe structures, however, are domain‐sensitive, preferentially supporting different visual stimuli. There has been little consideration of whether TBI preferentially disrupts the type of visually learned material and its association with cortical morphology following injury. Here, we investigated whether (1) episodic memory deficits differ according to the stimulus type, and (2) the pattern in memory performance can be linked to changes in cortical thickness.MethodsForty‐three individuals with moderate‐severe TBI and 38 demographically similar healthy controls completed a recognition task in which memory was assessed for three categories of stimuli: faces, scenes, and animals. The association between episodic memory accuracy on this task and cortical thickness was subsequently examined within and between groups.ResultsOur behavioral results support the notion of category‐specific impairments: the TBI group had significantly impaired accuracy for memory for faces and scenes, but not animals. Moreover, the association between cortical thickness and behavioral performance was only significant for faces between groups.ConclusionTaken together, these behavioral and structural findings provide support for an emergent memory account, and highlight that cortical thickness differentially affects episodic memory for specific categories of stimuli.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Brain Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience

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5. Traumatic Brain Injury

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