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Journal Article

Citation

Lewis JK, Morris MK, Morris RD, Krawiecki N, Foster MA. J. Head Trauma Rehabil. 2000; 15(3): 930-942.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA 30303-3083, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2000, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10785623

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To assess the performance of children with acquired brain injuries (ABIs) on a measure of social problem solving and to examine the relationships between participant characteristics and performance on the Social Knowledge Interview (SKI) and between parent-reported child behavior and performance on the SKI. DESIGN: Between-group comparisons using correlational analyses, matched pairs t-tests, and analysis of covariance (ANCOVA). PARTICIPANTS: Thirty-one children 6-12 years old with ABI and 31 control participants, matched on age and sex. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: The SKI, a measure of social problem-solving skills. RESULTS: Using matched pairs t-tests and ANCOVA, groups were compared on several SKI measures, including the number of unique responses generated for each problem scenario, the quality of those responses, and the ability to select the best response from a set of alternatives. When equated for socioeconomic status (SES), ABI and control participants performed similarly on the SKI; however, a trend for children with ABI to generate more assertive responses was observed. Performance on the SKI was positively correlated with IQ and related to parent-reported adaptive behavior. In children with ABI, performance was also related to primary lesion location and treatment regimen. CONCLUSIONS: Children with ABI are as capable of judging the appropriateness of behavior and generating response options on an analog measure of social problem solving as were their typically developing peers. However, those individual children with ABI who are more likely to have social problems may be identified by the qualitative aspects of their responses on analog tasks. These findings have implications for the identification of children with social skills deficits following ABI and for the development of effective rehabilitation strategies.


Language: en

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