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Background: Traumatic brain injury is associated with greater risk and earlier onset of dementia.
Objective: This study investigated whether later-life changes in subjective cognition and behavior - potential markers of Alzheimer disease - could be observed in cognitively unimpaired older persons with a history of suspected mild traumatic brain injury (smTBI) earlier in life and whether changes in cognition and behavior mediated the link between smTBI and daily function.
Methods: Data for 1392 participants from the Canadian Platform for Research Online to Investigate Health, Quality of Life, Cognition, Behaviour, Function, and Caregiving in Aging were analyzed. A validated self-reported brain injury screening questionnaire was used to determine the history of smTBI. Outcomes were measured using the Everyday Cognition scale (for subjective cognitive decline [SCD]), Mild Behavioral Impairment (MBI) Checklist, and Standard Assessment of Global Everyday Activities (for function). Inverse probability of treatment weighted logistic and negative binomial regressions were used to model smTBI (exposure) associations with SCD and MBI statuses, and Everyday Cognition-II and MBI Checklist total scores, respectively. Mediation analyses were conducted using bootstrapping.
Results: History of smTBI was linked to higher odds of SCD (odds ratio = 1.45, 95% confidence interval: [1.14-1.84]) or MBI (odds ratio = 1.75, 95% confidence interval: [1.54-1.98]), as well as 24% (95% confidence interval: [18%-31%]) higher Everyday Cognition-II and 52% (95% confidence interval: [41%-63%]) higher MBI Checklist total scores. Finally, SCD and MBI mediated approximately 45% and 56%, respectively, of the association between smTBI history and poorer function, as indicated by higher Standard Assessment of Global Everyday Activities total scores.
Conclusions: smTBI at any point in the life course is linked to poorer cognition and behavior even in community-dwelling older persons without MCI or dementia. Older persons with smTBI may benefit from early dementia risk assessment using tools that measure changes in cognition and behavior. Interventions for declining cognition and behavior may also be beneficial in this population to address functional impairment.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaclp.2024.12.004 | DOI Listing |
Learn Behav
September 2025
Departamento de Psicología, Facultad de Ciencias de la Educación y Psicología, Universidad de Córdoba, Calle San Alberto Magno, s/n, 14071, Córdoba, España.
This study investigates learning transfer processes in the teaching of pure tacts and intraverbals within the context of verbal behavior. The objectives were: to assess whether training pure tacts and intraverbals, through the inclusion of different stimuli, facilitates learning transfer to new impure tacts, and to determine whether one of these verbal operants (pure tact or intraverbal) better promotes learning transfer. The sample included 54 children aged 11-12 years, using a within-subjects experimental design with pre-post measures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Res Methods
September 2025
Faculty of Psychology and Cognitive Sciences, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland.
Emotional crying is a complex and multifaceted expression that is frequently observed in humans. Its communicative effects have been recently studied in more detail. However, many studies focus on just one specific feature of emotional crying, most often emotional tears, neglecting the complex nature of the expression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Psychiatry
September 2025
Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology of Polish Academy of Sciences, 3 Pasteur St., Warsaw, 02-093, Poland.
Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is characterized by pathological motivation to consume alcohol and cognitive inflexibility, leading to excessive alcohol seeking and use. In this study, we investigated the molecular correlates of impaired extinction of alcohol seeking during forced abstinence using a mouse model of AUD in the automated IntelliCage social system. This model distinguished AUD-prone and AUD-resistant animals based on the presence of ≥2 or <2 criteria of AUD, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Pharmacol Sin
September 2025
Key Laboratory of Mental Health of the Ministry of Education, Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area Center for Brain Science and Brain-Inspired Intelligence, Guangdong-Hong Kong Joint Laboratory for Psychiatric Disorders, Guangdong Province Key Laboratory of Psychiatric Disorders, Guangdong Bas
Recent investigations into the rapid antidepressant effects of ketamine, along with studies on schizophrenia-related susceptibility genes, have highlighted the GluN2A subunit as a critical regulator of both emotion and cognition. However, the specific impacts of acute pharmacological inhibition of GluN2A-containing NMDA receptors on brain microcircuits and the subsequent behavioral consequences remain poorly understood. In this study, we first examined the effects of MPX-004, a selective GluN2A NMDA receptor inhibitor, on behavior within the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurosci
September 2025
Department of Bioengineering, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA, United States,
In the hippocampal formation, cholinergic modulation from the medial septum/diagonal band of Broca (MSDB) is known to correlate with the speed of an animal's movements at sub-second timescales and also supports spatial memory formation. Yet, the extent to which sub-second cholinergic dynamics, if at all, align with transient behavioral and cognitive states supporting the encoding of novel spatial information remains unknown. In this study, we used fiber photometry to record the temporal dynamics in the population activity of septo-hippocampal cholinergic neurons at sub-second resolution during a hippocampus-dependent object location memory task using ChAT-Cre mice of both sexes.
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