This research was conducted by the Center for BrainHealth at the University of Texas at Dallas and was published Wednesday in the online open-access journal Frontiers in Neurology. While the fastest recovery occurs in the first six months following trauma, specific TBI programs can be applied to achieve continued improvements as the new experiment shows. The study enrolled, 20 adolescents aged 12 to 20 years, who had suffered TBI at least six months prior to participating in the research. The participants were exhibiting gist-reasoning deficits, which is the inability to extract relevant meaning from complex information. Gist reasoning is deeply associated with cognitive abilities, such as working memory, which involves holding pieces of temporary information and changing them, as in mental arithmetic and the ability to filter out useless information.
Beyond the Overdose: A Brain Injury Lens on Addiction and Drug Policy in BC
As British Columbia steps away from decriminalization, headlines are again dominated by enforcement, public safety, and crisis response. Yet in the same moment, another crisis continues to unfold; survivors of overdose are living with anoxic / hypoxic brain injuries...


