Hyperbaric Medicine 2009: 36(6); 391-9. Wright JK, Zant E, Groom K, Schlegel RE, Gilliland K.720th Special Tactics Group, Hurlburt Field, Florida, USA Two United States Air Force Airmen were injured in a roadside improvised explosive device (IED) blast in Iraq in...
Research & Publications:
Advancing Cognitive and Clinical Insight
Discover validated studies, methodologies, and real-world applications shaping modern assessment tools.
Association of Time Since Deployment, Combat Intensity, and Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms with Neuropsychological Outcomes Following Iraq War Deployment
Archives of General Psychiatry 2009; 66(9): 996-1004. Copyright (2009) American Medical Association. All rights reserved.Marx, Brian P. PhD; Brailey, Kevin PhD; Proctor, Susan P., DSc; MacDonald, Helen Z. PhD; Graefe, Anna C. BA; Amoroso, Paul MD, MPH; Heeren,...
Military and VA Telemedicine Systems for Patients with Traumatic Brain Injury
Journal of Rehabilitation Research & Development 2007:44(7); 1017-26 Philip Girard, MSDefense and Veterans Brain Injury Center, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC; Manchester Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Manchester, NH...
Army Research Needs for Automated Neuropsychological Tests: Monitoring Soldier Health and Performance Status
Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology 22S (2007), S7-S14 Karl E. Friedl, Stephen J. Grate, Susan P. Proctor, James W. Ness, Brian J. Lukey, Robert L. KaneU.S. Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, Natick, MA 01760-5007, United StatesMilitary...
Performance on the Automated Neuropsychological Assessment Metrics in a Nonclinical Sample of Soldiers Screened for Mild TBI after Returning from Iraq and Afghanistan: a Descriptive Analysis.
J. Head Trauma Rehab. 2009 Jan-Feb; 24(1): 24-31. Brian J. Ivins, MPS; Robert Kane, PhD; Karen A. Schwab, PhDDefense and Veterans Brain Injury Center, Washington, DC Purpose: To characterize cognitive test performance in a sample of US Army soldiers who had...
Mending the Mind: Multidisciplinary Efforts Converge to Help Service Members and Veterans Facing Brain Injuries
Army AL&T, January-March 2012, pp 89-92 Col Karl E. Friedl Key points regarding cognitive assessment:Studies have shown that cognitive tests detect concussion effects in individuals even after they report themselves to be symptom-free.
Acute white matter differences in the fornix following mild traumatic brain injury using diffusion tensor imaging
Journal of Neuroimaging, 23(2), 224-227. Yallampalli, R., Wilde, E. A., Bigler, E. D., McCauley, S. R., Hanten, G., Troyanskaya, M., . . . Levin, H. S. (2013).
Cognitive Change Associated with Self-Reported Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Sustained During the OEF/OIF Conflicts
The Clinical Neuropsychologist, doi: 10.1080/13854046.2011.650214, Available online: 24 Apr 2012 Tresa M. Roebuck-Spencer, Andrea S. Vincent, David A. Twillie, Bret W. Logan, Col Mary Lopez, Col Karl E. Friedl, Stephen J. Grate, Robert E. Schlegel and Kirby...
Serum brain biomarker level, neurocognitive performance and self-reported symptom changes in soldiers repeatedly exposed to low-level blast: A breacher pilot study
Journal of Neurotrauma, 30 (19), 1620-1630. Tate, C. M., K. K. W. Wang, et al. (2013).
Assessment of Acute Concussion in the Combat Environment
Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology (2012), First published online: April 3, 2012. Mark P. Kelly, Rodney L. Coldren, Robert V. Parish, Michael N. Dretsch, and Michael L. Russell Despite the prevalence of concussion in soldiers deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan,...