The findings suggest that individuals with symptomatic mTBI can present selective deficits in complex visual information processing that could interfere with vocational outcome. ERP paradigms such as those employed in this study thus show potential for evaluating outcome prognosis and merit further study.
Visual evoked potentials (VEPs) were recorded to textures segregated by gradients in orientation or motion. Recordings were obtained in traumatic brain-injured (TBI) subjects and in normal controls. We analyzed both the low-level VEPs (llVEPs) evoked by homogenous stimuli, as well as the components associated with texture segregation (tsVEP) obtained through an appropriate linear combination. Our results suggest that the tsVEP, presumably higher up in the visual processing chain than the llVEP, is sensitive to TBI and can reveal further information as to the nature of possible information processing deficits after TBI. It could also help quantify cortical damage that is not revealed with more standard clinical tools.
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