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70925 A TL1 team approach to investigate attention and learning at the intracranial network level and assess the effect different cognitive rehabilitation strategies have on measures of attention and learning

ABSTRACT IMPACT: Access to intracranial recording in our epileptic sample provides a unique opportunity to characterize neurological activation patterns associated with attention and implicit learning; this foundational physiological understanding will serve to better guide cognitive rehabilitation...

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Autores principales: Long, Sarah, Tocci, Catherine, Kalamangalam, Giridhar, Gunduz, Ayse, Perlstein, William
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8827869/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2021.572
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author Long, Sarah
Tocci, Catherine
Kalamangalam, Giridhar
Gunduz, Ayse
Perlstein, William
author_facet Long, Sarah
Tocci, Catherine
Kalamangalam, Giridhar
Gunduz, Ayse
Perlstein, William
author_sort Long, Sarah
collection PubMed
description ABSTRACT IMPACT: Access to intracranial recording in our epileptic sample provides a unique opportunity to characterize neurological activation patterns associated with attention and implicit learning; this foundational physiological understanding will serve to better guide cognitive rehabilitation techniques in TBI patients that aim to improve functioning across these cognitive domains. OBJECTIVES/GOALS: 1) Investigate the network level interactions of attention and learning during an attention network task (ANT) and an implicit learning contextual cueing (CC) task. 2) Assess the effect that attention rehabilitation strategies have on behavioral and neural responses pre/post-attentional intervention. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: This study involves refractory epilepsy patients (rEP) with implanted intracranial electrodes and moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury (m/sTBI) survivors. In rEP, we are identifying network level modulations of cortical regions via the ANT, which probes components of attention (alerting, orienting, and executive control) and a CC task that probes implicit learning. We hypothesize that modulation of attention and learning can be seen at the neuronal level. In TBI we will assess improvement following two behavioral attention rehabilitation paradigms; and use our results from epileptic patients to guide measurement of treatment-related neuroplastic change via scalp electroencephalography. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Preliminary behavioral results from the rEP cohort are in line with previous studies and the intracranial data is suggestive of region- and task-specific modulations in memory and attention related systems. Following completion of recruitment, we expect to more concretely identify regions and networks that exhibit modulatory effects associated with attention and implicit learning. Additionally, we anticipate that deficits in attention will be mitigated following training and hypothesize that implicit learning rate will improve in TBI patients as a result of both attentional rehabilitation paradigms. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF FINDINGS: Characterizing intracranial activity in epilepsy patients will give electrophysiology data unattainable in TBI patients. This intracranial perspective will enable us to propose mechanisms of action that may result from our interventions and enable critique of current rehabilitation treatments.
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spelling pubmed-88278692022-03-04 70925 A TL1 team approach to investigate attention and learning at the intracranial network level and assess the effect different cognitive rehabilitation strategies have on measures of attention and learning Long, Sarah Tocci, Catherine Kalamangalam, Giridhar Gunduz, Ayse Perlstein, William J Clin Transl Sci Evaluation ABSTRACT IMPACT: Access to intracranial recording in our epileptic sample provides a unique opportunity to characterize neurological activation patterns associated with attention and implicit learning; this foundational physiological understanding will serve to better guide cognitive rehabilitation techniques in TBI patients that aim to improve functioning across these cognitive domains. OBJECTIVES/GOALS: 1) Investigate the network level interactions of attention and learning during an attention network task (ANT) and an implicit learning contextual cueing (CC) task. 2) Assess the effect that attention rehabilitation strategies have on behavioral and neural responses pre/post-attentional intervention. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: This study involves refractory epilepsy patients (rEP) with implanted intracranial electrodes and moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury (m/sTBI) survivors. In rEP, we are identifying network level modulations of cortical regions via the ANT, which probes components of attention (alerting, orienting, and executive control) and a CC task that probes implicit learning. We hypothesize that modulation of attention and learning can be seen at the neuronal level. In TBI we will assess improvement following two behavioral attention rehabilitation paradigms; and use our results from epileptic patients to guide measurement of treatment-related neuroplastic change via scalp electroencephalography. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Preliminary behavioral results from the rEP cohort are in line with previous studies and the intracranial data is suggestive of region- and task-specific modulations in memory and attention related systems. Following completion of recruitment, we expect to more concretely identify regions and networks that exhibit modulatory effects associated with attention and implicit learning. Additionally, we anticipate that deficits in attention will be mitigated following training and hypothesize that implicit learning rate will improve in TBI patients as a result of both attentional rehabilitation paradigms. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF FINDINGS: Characterizing intracranial activity in epilepsy patients will give electrophysiology data unattainable in TBI patients. This intracranial perspective will enable us to propose mechanisms of action that may result from our interventions and enable critique of current rehabilitation treatments. Cambridge University Press 2021-03-30 /pmc/articles/PMC8827869/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2021.572 Text en © The Association for Clinical and Translational Science 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Evaluation
Long, Sarah
Tocci, Catherine
Kalamangalam, Giridhar
Gunduz, Ayse
Perlstein, William
70925 A TL1 team approach to investigate attention and learning at the intracranial network level and assess the effect different cognitive rehabilitation strategies have on measures of attention and learning
title 70925 A TL1 team approach to investigate attention and learning at the intracranial network level and assess the effect different cognitive rehabilitation strategies have on measures of attention and learning
title_full 70925 A TL1 team approach to investigate attention and learning at the intracranial network level and assess the effect different cognitive rehabilitation strategies have on measures of attention and learning
title_fullStr 70925 A TL1 team approach to investigate attention and learning at the intracranial network level and assess the effect different cognitive rehabilitation strategies have on measures of attention and learning
title_full_unstemmed 70925 A TL1 team approach to investigate attention and learning at the intracranial network level and assess the effect different cognitive rehabilitation strategies have on measures of attention and learning
title_short 70925 A TL1 team approach to investigate attention and learning at the intracranial network level and assess the effect different cognitive rehabilitation strategies have on measures of attention and learning
title_sort 70925 a tl1 team approach to investigate attention and learning at the intracranial network level and assess the effect different cognitive rehabilitation strategies have on measures of attention and learning
topic Evaluation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8827869/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2021.572
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