Strategic Memory and Reasoning Training for Cognitive Problems (SMART)
Traumatic Brain Injury, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Traumatic Brain Injury
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:Inclusion criteria include .
- adults between the ages of 19 to 65 years
- speak and comprehend English, as not all of the standardized cognitive tests have been normed for non-English speakers
- diagnosis of either mild or moderate TBI (as defined by OSU TBI interview) and/or diagnosis of subthreshold or full PTSD (as determined by Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale)
Exclusion Criteria:
- someone who is not proficient in reading, comprehending, and speaking English
- self-report on phone screen interview of pre-existing cerebral palsy, intellectual disability, autism, epilepsy, schizophrenia, stroke, pervasive developmental disorder, or a diagnosed learning disability
- history of psychotic disorder or bipolar disorder (by self-report)
- current alcohol or drug dependence (by self-report)
- severe TBI (determined by OSU TBI interview)
- participants who are determined by the TOMM (more than five errors on Trial 2 or the Retention trial) to be malingering neuropsychological problems
- neuropsychological testing or r any cognitive training in the past 3 months as this could introduce practice effects.
Sites / Locations
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Placebo Comparator
Experimental
Brain Health Workshop
SMART
The BHW training has been used in multiple prior studies as a comparison training program in cognitive training trials It consists of sessions of fact-based information about the brain but does not train cognitive strategies. Topics include neuroanatomy, neuroplasticity, and effects of TBI on cognitive functioning. Other sessions focus on diet, exercise, sleep, and social functioning and their relationships to brain health. Participants are encouraged to share how the topics impact their lives. Participants are given take-home reading materials on related topics that were then discussed at the last session. At home, they were instructed to watch assigned videos but had no other homework.
SMART emphasizes top-down processing by targeting focused attention, assimilation of information, and mental flexibility and innovation, all higher-order cognitive functions driven by the frontal lobes. SMART was delivered in small groups (n = 2 to 8) consisting of two 3-hour sessions over two days, followed by one 3-hour session a month later. Overall, sessions focused on strategic attention, integrative reasoning, and cognitive control functions (Chapman, 2014). Training consists of initial sessions of skills training with the one-month follow-up session being a "booster session" consisting of review. We modified the training such that all sessions included skills training with briefer review. The first two sessions consisted of strategic attention and integrated reasoning and the final session discussed innovation.