Arianna Rigon
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
17 Papers
35 Citations
Arianna Rigon is an academic researcher from Vanderbilt University Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Traumatic brain injury & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 17 publications. Previous affiliations of Arianna Rigon include University of Iowa & Marshall University.
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Papers
Is traumatic brain injury associated with reduced inter-hemispheric functional connectivity? A study of large-scale resting state networks following traumatic brain injury
TL;DR: These findings suggest that distinct RSNs display specific patterns of aberrant FC following TBI; this represents a step forward in the search for biomarkers useful for early diagnosis and treatment of TBI-related cognitive impairment.
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The female advantage: sex as a possible protective factor against emotion recognition impairment following traumatic brain injury
TL;DR: It is suggested that sex may serve as a protective factor for social impairment following TBI and inform clinicians working with TBI as well as research on the neurophysiological correlates of sex differences in social functioning.
Relationship between individual differences in functional connectivity and facial-emotion recognition abilities in adults with traumatic brain injury.
TL;DR: The ability to successfully recognize facial-affect after TBI is related to rs-FC within components of facial-Affective networks, and network-based statistics provide new evidence that further the understanding of the mechanisms underlying emotion recognition impairment in TBI.
Frontal and Temporal Structural Connectivity Is Associated with Social Communication Impairment Following Traumatic Brain Injury.
TL;DR: Frontotemporal white matter microstructural integrity is associated with social communication abilities in adults with TBI, and this finding contributes to the understanding of the mechanisms leading to communication impairment following TBI and can inform the development of new neuromodulation therapies as well as diagnostic tools.
Facial-affect recognition deficit as a predictor of different aspects of social-communication impairment in traumatic brain injury.
TL;DR: The findings support growing evidence that emotion-recognition deficits play a role in specific aspects of social-communication outcomes after TBI and should be considered in treatment planning.
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