Journal article
Predictors of very-long-term sociocognitive function after pediatric traumatic brain injury: Evidence for the vulnerability of the immature "social Brain"
NP Ryan, V Anderson, C Godfrey, MH Beauchamp, L Coleman, S Eren, S Rosema, K Taylor, C Catroppa
Journal of Neurotrauma | Published : 2014
Abstract
Emotion perception (EP) forms an integral part of social communication and is critical to attain developmentally appropriate goals. This skill, which emerges relatively early in development, is driven by increasing connectivity among regions of a distributed sociocognitive neural network and may be vulnerable to disruption from early-childhood traumatic brain injury (TBI). The present study aimed to evaluate the very-long-term effect of childhood TBI on EP, as well as examine the contribution of injury- and non-injury-related risk and resilience factors to variability in sociocognitive outcomes. Thirty-four young adult survivors of early-childhood TBI (mean [M], 20.62 years; M time since inj..
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Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supprted by the Victorian Neurotrauma Initiative, a National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Fellowship (to V. A.), a NHMRC Career Development Award (to C. C.), and the Victorian Government Operational Infrastructure Scheme.