“…Each of the TBI terms was search in conjunction with each of the other terms (eg, "TBI and knowledge," "TBI and beliefs," "TBI and misconceptions," "TBI and misperceptions") as well as a combination of the other terms (eg, "TBI and knowledge and beliefs") to yield the greatest number of relevant hits. Exclusionary criteria Table 1 A sampling of brain injury misconceptions Wearing seatbelts causes as many brain injuries as it prevents [1,4,6,14,15] Sometimes a second blow to the brain can help a person remember things that were forgotten [1,4,6,14,15] Even when people are in coma for a few weeks, as soon as they wake up, they can recognize and speak to others nearby [1,4,6,14,15] After a brain injury, people can forget who they are and not recognize others, but be normal in every other way [1,4,6,14,15] Emotional problems after brain injury are usually not related to brain damage [1,4,6,14,15] How quickly a person recovers depends mostly on how hard they work at recovering [1,4,6,14,15] Individuals with mild brain injury typically show symptoms that worsen over time [9] Individuals with mild brain injury often require disability [9] Individuals with mild brain injury can forget people they've known for years [9] Individuals with mild brain injury can completely forget who they are [9] included editorials, popular news pieces, and any articles not published in English.…”