Affected Areas
Neuropsychological Tests
Case Studies
Terminology
100

The most common area of damage from TBIs. Lesioning might lead to impaired executive function, impulsivity, slowed thinking, and more. 

What is the frontal lobe?

100

This common neuropsychological test assesses both frontal and temporal lobe function.

What is the Rey-O Complex?

100

This similarity between Sam and M.L. is an exemplar of  the group(s) most commonly affected by Severe TBI.

What is being a young male?

100

This type of brain damage involves the skull getting caught between two compressing objects.

What is a crushing head injury?

200

Damage to this area might lead to visual field impairments, or cases of agnosia. 

What is the occipital lobe?

200

This assessment is a structured method used to assess memory through the recall of personal events.

What is the autobiographical interview?

200

The stationary object that collided with Sam's car.

What is a lamp post?

200

Brain damage opposite the injury site

What is a contre-coup injury?

300

Damage to this brain region made it difficult for Sam to keep a diary and gain independence.

What is the temporal lobe?

300

This very common post-head-trauma neuropsychological test was administered to M.L. but not to Sam.

What is the Glasgow Coma Scale?

300

This deficit was revealed in the writing and object assembly tasks of Sam's assessment.

What is right-sided hemiparesis?

300

Penetration, crushing, and closed damage 

What are the three types of head injury?

400

Damage to this brain region in tbi victims typically causes arousal issues in the prefrontal cortex, leading to the common executive dysfunction issues present.

What is the reticular formation?

400

Perhaps the most widely used neuropsychological test that we've seen in class. This assessment involves many subtests and has a number of editions.

What is the Weschler Adult Intelligence Scale
400

This is the specific term used to describe M.L.'s memory impairment.

What is isolated retrograde amnesia? (Or post-traumatic amnesia)

400

This deficit is also associated with psychiatric conditions like Autism Spectrum Disorder that involve frontal lobe differences.

What is concrete communication?

500

This bundle of fibres mediates memory and was lesioned in M.L.'s case. 

What is the uncinate fasciculus?

500

This modified test consisted of paper-and-pencil tasks worth varying amounts of points. It was able to display some of M.L's frontal lobe dysfunction

What is the Six-Element Task?

500

These specific areas of an MRI scan indicated the locations of the  lesions in M.L.'s brain. 

What are hypointensities?

500

This stage of severe brain injury results from lack of oxygenation due to environment and context.

What is a second injury?

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