Neuropsychological aspects of driving after brain lesion : simulator study and on-road driving.

Author(s)
Lundqvist, A. Alinder, J. Alm, H. Gerdle, B. Levander, S. & Rönnberg, J.
Year
Abstract

Twenty-nine patients with brain lesion and 29 matched controls participated in the study. The patients were socially well recovered with a high rate of employment. Compared with the controls, they performed significantly worse on a neuropsychological test battery, especially on executive and cognitive functions. Patients drove as well as controls in predictable situations in the advanced simulator used. In unpredictable situations, they demonstrated longer reaction times and safety margins, as well as difficulties in allocating processing resources to a secondary task. The patients showed significantly less attention, worse traffic behaviour, and less risk awareness when driving in real traffic. Forty-one percent of the patients did not pass the driving test. The neuropsychological test battery was factor analysed into four factors: executive capacity, cognitive capacity, automatic attentional capacity, and simple perceptual-motor capacity. The second factor was the most significant with a simultaneous capacity test predicting driving performance with 78% confidence. (Author/publisher)

Request publication

4 + 13 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.

Publication

Library number
C 29453 [electronic version only] /83 /
Source

Applied Neuropsychology, Vol. 4 (1997), No. 4, p. 220-230, 42 ref.

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.