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Issue title: Community Based Rehabilitation after Neurologic Injury
Guest editors: Stephanie A. Kowlakowsky-Hayner
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Ashley, Mark J.; * | Ashley, Jessica | Kreber, Lisa
Affiliations: Centre for Neuro Skills, Bakersfield, CA, USA | Rehabilitation Research Center, Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, San Jose, CA, USA
Correspondence: [*] Corresponding author: Mark J. Ashley, Sc.D., Centre for Neuro Skills, 2658 Mt. Vernon Avenue, Bakersfield, CA 93306, USA. Tel.: +1 661 872 3408; Fax: +1 661 872 5150; E-mail: MAshley@neuroskills.com
Abstract: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) results in disruption of information processing via damage to primary, secondary, and tertiary cortical regions, as well as, subcortical pathways supporting information flow within and between cortical structures. TBI predominantly affects the anterior frontal poles, anterior temporal poles, white matter tracts and medial temporal structures. Fundamental information processing skills such as attention, perceptual processing, categorization and cognitive distance are concentrated within these same regions and are frequently disrupted following injury. Information processing skills improve in accordance with the extent to which residual frontal and temporal neurons can be encouraged to recruit and bias neuronal networks or the degree to which the functional connectivity of neural networks can be re-established and result in re-emergence or regeneration of specific cognitive skills. Higher-order cognitive processes, i.e., memory, reasoning, problem solving and other executive functions, are dependent upon the integrity of attention, perceptual processing, categorization, and cognitive distance. A therapeutic construct for treatment of attention, perceptual processing, categorization and cognitive distance deficits is presented along with an interventional model for encouragement of re-emergence or regeneration of these fundamental information processing skills.
Keywords: Cognitive rehabilitation, traumatic brain injury, information processing
DOI: 10.3233/NRE-2012-0772
Journal: NeuroRehabilitation, vol. 31, no. 1, pp. 31-39, 2012
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