Publication | Closed Access
Living with cognitive-communicative difficulties following traumatic brain injury: Using a model of interpersonal communication to characterize the subjective experience
32
Citations
36
References
1997
Year
Traumatic Brain InjuryDisabilityNeurological RehabilitationNeurological InjuryCognitive RehabilitationSocial ImpairmentPsychologyBrain Injury RehabilitationBrain InjuryConversation AnalysisVerbal InteractionNeurorehabilitationCognitive CommunicationCognitive SciencePsychiatryRehabilitationSubjective ExperienceInterpersonal CommunicationSevere Cerebral InsultAcquired Neurogenic Communication DisordersConcussionArtsMedicineInterpersonal Communication DifficultiesNeurogenic Communication DisordersPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
Abstract This study was undertaken to better understand the subjective experience of long-term cognitive-communicative impairments following severe cerebral insult. An additional aim was to explore the utility of a model of interpersonal communication in elucidating how such difficulties affect communicative interactions. Participants in the study were five dyads in which one member had sustained a severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). Data collection and analysis utilized both qualitative and quantitative methodology. It was found that individuals with long-term TBI continue to experience significant communication difficulties, which in combination with problems of memory, fatigue and irritability commonly generate unsatisfactory interpersonal communication experiences. The model of interpersonal communication provided a useful framework for considering why these interactions are ineffective or unsatisfactory. It is felt that the methodology outlined in this paper may offer a useful means of investigating the relationship between neurogenic communication impairments/disabilities and interpersonal communication difficulties experienced by individuals from a variety of clinical populations.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1