Attention
Types of Attention
Focused/Sustained Attention
The state of focusing on one stimulus to the exclusion of all other competing stimuli
-“I try to watch TV but I just drift off.”
Selective Attention
Alternating Attention
DIvided Attention
Frontal Lobe Disorders
The frontal lobes are responsible for higher-order functions; executive functions, emotional-behavioral-social control regulation, motor functioning, and the appropriate use of language, social pragmatics, and the subtleties of communication (innuendoes, humor)
Frontal Lobe Damage
Motor impairment; halting/disorganized speech; personality changes; aphasia; apraxia; difficulty with emotional/behavioral control; Patients may exhibit passivity, apathy, or lack of internal drive/motivation
Executive Functions
List of Executive Functions
Commonalities: Executive Function
-Inability to focus on more than one thing at a time
Patients are easily distracted
Pre-morbid responses
Post-Injury
Orientation
Types of Memory
Procedural (implicit)
Ability to perform skills in the absence of conscious awareness (motor memory). Remember the procedure for riding a bike.
Declarative (explicit)
-Factual memory, ability to do algebra, do well on tests, ability to recall so you don’t forget. Declarative memories can become procedural memories.
Long-term memory
Short-term memory
Recent memory
Delayed recall of information up to 30 minutes
Prospective memory
The ability to recall information needed in the future
Episodic memory
-Recall of temporarily dated events. Tied to a date in time or an episode
Problem Solving
o Needs to use attention skills as well as executive functioning
o Organize- make lists
o Sequencing- steps in order of importance
Broad based test