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Elsevier, Clinical Neurophysiology, 2(120), p. 309-314

DOI: 10.1016/j.clinph.2008.11.021

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Changes in long term neural connectivity following psychological trauma

Journal article published in 2009 by Fallon Cook, Joseph Ciorciari, Tracey Varker ORCID, Grant James Devilly
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

Objective: Neural connectivity differences between adults reporting childhood, adulthood or no history of trauma were examined. Methods: A total of 39 participants completed the Post-traumatic Stress Diagnostic Scale (PDS; Foa EB. Post-traumatic Stress Diagnostic Scale (PDS) Manual. Minneapolis, MN: National Computer Systems, 1995), a Word Memory Task (WMT; [McNally RJ, Metzger LJ, Lasko NB, Clancy SA, Pitman RK. Directed forgetting of trauma cues in adult survivors of childhood sexual abuse with and without post-traumatic stress disorder. J Abnorm Psychol 1998;107:596–601]) and EEG analysis. Intelligence was not assessed during the study. Results: As predicted, those with childhood trauma had significantly higher EEG coherence than those with either adulthood trauma or no past trauma. Conclusions: Significant differences were observed over frontal, central, temporal and parietal areas. Evidence was found suggesting that childhood psychological trauma may have a lasting impact on neuronal connectivity. Significance: This is the first study to demonstrate the suspected long term effect of traumaover central, temporal and parietal areas. Longtermneural correlates of childhood and adult traumaappear to suggest information processing differences – differences that may, eventually, lead to better interventions following trauma.