24 research outputs found
Association Between Long-Term Cognitive Decline in Vietnam Veterans With TBI and Caregiver Attachment Style.
OBJECTIVE: To examine whether a caregiver's attachment style is associated with patient cognitive trajectory after traumatic brain injury (TBI).
SETTING: National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland.
PARTICIPANTS: Forty Vietnam War veterans with TBI and their caregivers.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Cognitive performance, measured by the Armed Forces Qualification Test percentile score, completed at 2 time points: preinjury and 40 years postinjury.
DESIGN: On the basis of caregivers' attachment style (secure, fearful, preoccupied, dismissing), participants with TBI were grouped into a high or low group. To examine the association between cognitive trajectory of participants with TBI and caregivers' attachment style, we ran four 2 × 2 analysis of covariance on cognitive performances.
RESULTS: After controlling for other factors, cognitive decline was more pronounced in participants with TBI with a high fearful caregiver than among those with a low fearful caregiver. Other attachment styles were not associated with decline.
CONCLUSION AND IMPLICATION: Caregiver fearful attachment style is associated with a significant decline in cognitive status after TBI. We interpret this result in the context of the neural plasticity and cognitive reserve literatures. Finally, we discuss its impact on patient demand for healthcare services and potential interventions
Unbounded violation of tripartite Bell inequalities
We prove that there are tripartite quantum states (constructed from random
unitaries) that can lead to arbitrarily large violations of Bell inequalities
for dichotomic observables. As a consequence these states can withstand an
arbitrary amount of white noise before they admit a description within a local
hidden variable model. This is in sharp contrast with the bipartite case, where
all violations are bounded by Grothendieck's constant. We will discuss the
possibility of determining the Hilbert space dimension from the obtained
violation and comment on implications for communication complexity theory.
Moreover, we show that the violation obtained from generalized GHZ states is
always bounded so that, in contrast to many other contexts, GHZ states do in
this case not lead to extremal quantum correlations. The results are based on
tools from the theories of operator spaces and tensor norms which we exploit to
prove the existence of bounded but not completely bounded trilinear forms from
commutative C*-algebras.Comment: Substantial changes in the presentation to make the paper more
accessible for a non-specialized reade
Decomposition of operator semigroups on W*-algebras
We consider semigroups of operators on a W-algebra and prove, under
appropriate assumptions, the existence of a Jacobs-DeLeeuw-Glicksberg type
decomposition. This decomposition splits the algebra into a "stable" and
"reversible" part with respect to the semigroup and yields, among others, a
structural approach to the Perron-Frobenius spectral theory for completely
positive operators on W-algebras.Comment: referee's comments incorporated. To appear in Semigroup Foru
Inhomogeneous States in a Small Magnetic Disk with Single-Ion Surface Anisotropy
We investigate analytically and numerically the ground and metastable states
for easy-plane Heisenberg magnets with single-ion surface anisotropy and disk
geometry. The configurations with two half-vortices at the opposite points of
the border are shown to be preferable for strong anisotropy. We propose a
simple analytical description of the spin configurations for all values of a
surface anisotropy. The effects of lattice pinning leads to appearance of a set
of metastable configurations.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures; submitted to Phys. Rev.
Association Between Traumatic Brain Injury-Related Brain Lesions and Long-term Caregiver Burden.
To investigate the association between traumatic brain injury (TBI)-related brain lesions and long-term caregiver burden in relation to dysexecutive syndrome.
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland.
A total of 256 participants: 105 combat veterans with TBI, 23 healthy control combat veterans (HCv), and 128 caregivers.
Caregiver burden assessed by the Zarit Burden Interview at 40 years postinjury.
Participants with penetrating TBI were compared with HCv on perceived caregiver burden and neuropsychological assessment measures. Data of computed tomographic scans (overlay lesion maps of participants with a penetrating TBI whose caregivers have a significantly high burden) and behavioral statistical analyses were combined to identify brain lesions associated with caregiver burden.
Burden was greater in caregivers of veterans with TBI than in caregivers of HCv. Caregivers of participants with lesions affecting cognitive and behavioral indicators of dysexecutive syndrome (ie, left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and dorsal anterior cingulate cortex) showed greater long-term burden than caregivers of participants with lesions elsewhere in the brain.
The TBI-related brain lesions have a lasting effect on long-term caregiver burden due to cognitive and behavioral factors associated with dysexecutive syndrome