Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine the influence of traumatic brain injury (TBI) on narrative discourse comprehension and production of individuals with TBI compared with a non-brain-injured (NBI) group. Furthermore, this work investigated the potential influence of sociodemographic factors (ie, age, education, sex) on narrative discourse performance. DESIGN: Case-control design. SETTING: General community. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 44 adults (N=44) were grouped into 2 age- and education-matched cohorts. The TBI group comprised 21 participants with mild-moderate cognitive impairment, and the NBI comprised 23 participants. INTERVENTIONS: Not applicable. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Narrative discourse outcomes were measured by 2 comprehension measures (Discourse Comprehension Test, picture story comprehension task) and 2 production measures (story grammar, story completeness). Four univariate analyses of covariance were performed with age, education, and sex as covariates. The analyses of covariance were performed using parameter estimates with robust standard errors, and boxplots were constructed to understand differences between cohorts for each discourse measure. RESULTS: No sociodemographic variables (ie, the covariates) were significant for any of the 4 discourse measures. The NBI group outperformed the TBI group on the Discourse Comprehension Test (P=.003, 95% CI [1.46-6.82], partial η(2)=0.20), Picture Story Comprehension (P=.005, 95% CI [0.61-3.26], partial η(2)=0.18), and story completeness (P=.005; 95% CI [0.43-2.26]; partial η(2)=0.21). Effect sizes were large across these 3 discourse measures. No significant difference between groups was found for story grammar (P=.440; 95% CI [-0.11-0.25]; partial η(2)=0.02). CONCLUSIONS: TBI disrupts both narrative discourse comprehension and production ability. Findings underscore the need to evaluate both narrative comprehension and production performance after TBI. Age, education, and sex did not influence discourse outcomes.