Cognitive difficulties are frequently reported by Operation Enduring Freedom /Operation Iraqi Freedom military personnel who sustained mild traumatic brain injuries (TBIs). The current study examined ...several potential factors that may contribute to self-reported cognitive difficulties in postdeployment clinical settings. Eighty-four subjects who sustained a mild or moderate TBI and reported cognitive difficulties underwent neurocognitive testing. Multiple regression analyses were used to determine the amount of variance in neurocognitive performance accounted for by the predictor variables (demographic, mechanism of injury, time since injury, headache severity, combat stress, postconcussive complaints, and effort/performance validity). The predictor variables collectively accounted for 51.7% of the variance in cognitive performance (F (8,72) = 11/99, p < 0.001). The most potent predictor of cognitive functioning was performance validity/effort, which uniquely accounted for 16.3% of the variance (p < 0.01). Self-reported symptom severity, including postconcussive complaints, combat stress, and headache intensity, accounted for 7.2% of the variance (p < 0.05). Demographic factors and injury characteristics, such as time since injury and mechanism of injury, were not significant predictive factors of cognitive performance. The findings of the current study underscore the need to include measurement of effort as part of neurocognitive evaluation in postdeployment settings when evaluating cognitive complaints associated with mild TBI.
Transitioning from the military to the civilian lifestyle, especially for military veterans who decide to pursue careers in the civilian workforce, is often a difficult experience. The job interview, ...a task in which the interviewees meet and discuss their skills and career goals with strangers in a position of authority, is the first step of assimilation into the civilian workplace, which might cause them to experience nervousness or anxiety. This feeling of excessive stress may compromise the interviewee's performance, therefore potentially impeding their successful transition to the workforce. Intelligent interview training technologies would benefit from automated stress detection systems that could assist interviewees in better understanding causes and antecedents of stressors during their interaction with the interviewer. This paper examines self-reported and bio-behavioral measures of stress experienced during mock job interviews conducted with 24 U.S. military veterans. Self-reported measures were captured via a global measure of stress reported by the participant at the conclusion of the interview, and a continuous moment-to-moment annotation of stress resulting from the retrospective inspection of the interview video recording. Bio-behavioral indices of stress include physiological reactivity measures captured via electrodermal activity and electrocardiogram signals, as well as acoustic measures extracted from speech. Results indicate that physiological reactivity measures exhibit moderate-to-strong correlation with self-reported measures of stress, and can be thus used to estimate the self-reported stress measures. Augmenting the feature space with demographic and psychological traits can further improve the accurate detection of stress during the interviews.
The peacemaker Bard Hobson, Suzanne
TLS, the Times Literary Supplement,
04/2015
5847
Journal Article, Book Review
Suzanne Hobson reviews "By Avon River," a new edition of the 1949 collection of poems, essays and commentary by English writer H.D. This version is edited by Lara Vetter and includes an introduction ...wherein Vetter pays close attention to the critical and cultural context to which "By Avon River" belongs.