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Aphasia [Multiple-component retail product]

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  • Formāts: Multiple-component retail product, 2006 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 453 g, Contains 4 hardbacks
  • Sērija : Critical Concepts in Psychology
  • Izdošanas datums: 06-Feb-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138848565
  • ISBN-13: 9781138848566
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  • Formāts: Multiple-component retail product, 2006 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 453 g, Contains 4 hardbacks
  • Sērija : Critical Concepts in Psychology
  • Izdošanas datums: 06-Feb-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138848565
  • ISBN-13: 9781138848566

Aphasia—from the Greek aphatos (‘speechless’)—describes impairments and disabilities in the use of language arising from, for example, strokes, trauma, tumours, surgery, or progressive brain deterioration. It includes problems with the expression and comprehension of language in speech, reading, writing, and signing.

Research in and around aphasia continues to flourish such that, even for specialist aphasiologists, it is extremely hard to keep up to date with developments. There is a real threat of laboratory-based human research, neuropsychology, computational-modelling research, and brain-imaging studies proceeding in ignorance of each other. Indeed, the sheer scale of the growth in cognitive neuroscience makes this collection especially timely and welcome; it permits ready access to the most influential and important works across the full breadth of the discipline.

The materials gathered in Volume I include explorations of the foundations of aphasiology. The major works collected in the second volume examine theoretical developments, while Volume III is organized around contemporary issues in aphasiology. The final volume makes sense of clinical issues, such as recovery, assessment, and rehabilitation.

With a full index, together with a comprehensive introduction, newly written by the editor, which places the collected material in its historical and intellectual context, Aphasia is an essential work of reference. For researchers and advanced students, it is a vital one-stop research and instructional resource.

VOLUME I HISTORICAL FOUNDATIONS
Acknowledgements xv
Chronological table of reprinted articles and chapters xvii
Preface xxvii
Introduction: historical foundations 1(1)
1 The early history of aphasiology: from the Egyptian surgeons (c. 1700 BC) to Broca (1861)
5(36)
Ronald Prins
Roelien Bastiaanse
2 `Letter from Dr. F. J. Gall, to Joseph Fr[ eiherr] von Retzer, upon the functions of the brain, in man and animals'
41(10)
D. G. Goyder
3 Jean-Baptiste Bouillaud, Claude-Francois Lallemand, and the role of the frontal lobe: location and mislocation of language in the early 19th century
51(12)
Claudio Luzzatti
Harry Whitaker
4 Loss of speech, chronic softening and partial destruction of the anterior left lobe of the brain
63(3)
Pierre Paul Broca
5 Remarks on the seat of the faculty of articulated language, following an observation of aphemia (loss of speech)
66(22)
Paul Broca
6 Translation of Broca's 1865 report: localization of speech in the third left frontal convolution
88(19)
Ennis Ata Berker
Ata Husnu Berker
Aaron Smith
7 Wernicke's contribution to the study of aphasia
107(13)
Norman Geschwind
8 Old solutions to new problems: a contribution to today's relevance of Carl Wernicke's theory of aphasia
120(17)
G. Blanken
J. Dittmann
H. Sinn
9 On aphasia
137(40)
L. Lichtheim
10 The legacy of the Wernicke-Lichtheim model
177(20)
Roger E. Graves
11 From agrammatism to paragrammatism: German aphasiological traditions and grammatical disturbances
197(69)
R. De Bleser
12 On affections of speech from disease of the brain
266(15)
J. Hughlings-Jackson
13 The psycholinguistic approach to aphasia of Chajim Steinthal
281
Paul Eling
VOLUME II THEORETICAL DEVELOPMENTS
Acknowledgements vii
Introduction: theoretical developments 1(1)
14 Defining aphasia: some theoretical and clinical implications of operating from a formal definition
5(14)
Malcolm R. Mcneil
Sheila R. Pratt
15 The ineluctable and interdependent evolution of the concepts of language and aphasia
19(4)
Yves Joanette
Ana Ines Ansaldo
16 Speech fluency in aphasics
23(7)
A. Kreindler
Lucretia Mihailescu
A. Fradis
17 The nature of language deficit in aphasia
30(30)
Hildred Schuell
James J. Jenkins
18 Factors and forms of aphasia
60(14)
A. R. Luria
19 A redefinition of the syndrome of Broca's aphasia: implications for a neuropsychological model of language
74(56)
Rita Sloan Berndt
Alfonso Caramazza
20 Jargon aphasia
130(14)
M. Kinsbourne
Elizabeth K. Warrington
21 Phonemic paraphasias and psycholinguistic production models for neologistic jargon
144(25)
Hugh W. Buckingham
22 Jargon aphasia: what have we learned?
169(29)
Jane Marshall
23 Apraxia of speech: concepts and controversies
198(30)
Wolfram Ziegler
Ingrid Aichert
Anja Staiger
24 A predictive model for diagnosing stroke-related apraxia of speech
228(37)
Kirrie J. Ballard
Lamiae Azizi
Joseph R. Duffy
Malcolm R. Mcneil
Mark Halaki
Nicholas O'Dwyer
Claire Layfield
Dominique I. Scholl
Adam P. Vogel
Donald A. Robin
25 Primary progressive aphasia: diagnosis, varieties, evolution
265(17)
Andrew Kertesz
Wilda Davidson
Patricia Mccabe
Kenji Takagi
David Munoz
26 Patterns of paralexia: a psycholinguistic approach
282(23)
John C. Marshall
Freda Newcombe
27 Acquired dyslexia and dysgraphia
305(15)
Ria De Bleser
Claudio Luzzatti
28 Connectionist approaches to language disorders
320(35)
Trevor A. Harley
29 Category specific semantic impairments
355(31)
Elizabeth K. Warrington
T. Shallice
30 A review of classical accounts of verbal perseveration and their modern-day relevance
386(38)
Jacqueline Stark
31 Social and communication disorders following traumatic brain injury
424(26)
Leanne Togher
Skye Mcdonald
Chris Code
32 Cortical and subcortical aphasias compared
450
Andrew Kirk
Andrew Kertesz
VOLUME III CONTEMPORARY ISSUES
Acknowledgements ix
Introduction: contemporary issues 1(1)
33 Paul Broca's historic cases: high resolution MR imaging of the brains of Leborgne and Lelong
5(18)
N. F. Dronkers
O. Plaisant
M. T. Iba-Zizen
E. A. Cabanis
34 Broca's complex as the unification space for language
23(14)
Peter Hagoort
35 The functional basis of speech automatisms (recurring utterances)
37(29)
Gerhard Blanken
36 Wernicke's aphasia reflects a combination of acoustic-phonological and semantic control deficits: a case-series comparison of Wernicke's aphasia, semantic dementia and semantic aphasia
66(29)
Holly Robson
Karen Sage
Matthew A. Lambon Ralph
37 Nouns and verbs are retrieved with differently distributed neural systems
95(9)
Antonio R. Damasio
Daniel Tranel
38 Damage to ventral and dorsal language pathways in acute aphasia
104(22)
Dorothee Kummerer
Gesa Hartwigsen
Philipp Kellmeyer
Volkmar Glauche
Irina Mader
Stefan Kloppel
Julia Suchan
Hans-Otto Karnath
Cornelius Weiller
Dorothee Saur
39 Information-processing models of aphasia: updating the diagram makers
126(18)
Kenneth M. Heilman
40 Hypotheses on the dissociation between "referential" and "modalizing" verbal behavior in aphasia
144(24)
Jean-Luc Nespoulous
Chris Code
Jacques Virbel
Andre Roch Lecours
41 Qualitative methods in aphasia research: basic issues
168(18)
Jack S. Damico
Nina Simmons-Mackie
Mary Oelschlaeger
Roberta Elman
Elizabeth Armstrong
42 The role of memory and attention in aphasic language performance
186(30)
Malcolm Mcneil
William Hula
Jee Eun Sung
43 Short-term memory, working memory, and syntactic comprehension in aphasia
216(47)
David Caplan
Jennifer Michaud
Rebecca Hufford
44 Recovery in deep dysphasia: evidence for a relation between auditory--verbal STM capacity and lexical errors in repetition
263(32)
Nadine Martin
Eleanor M. Saffran
Gary S. Dell
45 The role of plasticity-related functional reorganization in the explanation of central dyslexias
295(62)
Stephen R. Welbourne
Anna M. Woollams
Jenni Crisp
Matthew A. Lambon Ralph
46 Primary progressive aphasia -- a language-based dementia
357(12)
M.-Marsel Mesulam
47 Semantic dementia: a form of circumscribed cerebral atrophy
369(18)
J. S. Snowden
P. J. Goulding
D. Neary
48 Primary progressive aphasias and their contribution to the contemporary knowledge about the brain-language relationship
387(33)
Michal Harciarek
Andrew Kertesz
49 Primary progressive apraxia of speech: clinical features and acoustic and neurologic correlates
420(26)
Joseph R. Duffy
Edythe A. Strand
Heather Clark
Mary Machulda
Jennifer L. Whitwell
Keith A. Josephs
50 Neural organization of language: clues from sign language aphasia
446
Gregory Hickok
Ursula Bellugi
VOLUME IV CLINICAL ISSUES AND APPLICATIONS
Acknowledgements ix
Introduction: clinical issues and applications 1(4)
51 Has speech and language therapy been shown not to work?
5(4)
Alex P. Leff
David Howard
PART 1 Recovery from aphasia
9(52)
52 Multifactorial processes in recovery from aphasia: developing the foundations for a multileveled framework
11(27)
Chris Code
53 Long-term prognosis of aphasia after stroke
38(14)
Hanane El Hachioui
Hester F Lingsma
Mieke W M E Van De Sandt-Koenderman
Diederik W J Dippel
Peter J Koudstaal
Evy G Visch-Brink
54 How long is the recovery of global aphasia? Twenty-five years of follow-up in a patient with left hemisphere stroke
52(9)
Nicola Smania
Marialuisa Gandolfi
Salvatore Maria Aglioti
Paolo Girardi
Antonio Fiaschi
Flavia Girardi
PART 2 Models and perspectives on clinical research
61(258)
55 Psycholinguistic assessments of language processing in aphasia (PALPA): an introduction
63(25)
Janice Kay
Ruth Lesser
Max Coltheart
56 Models for therapy
88(23)
David Howard
Karalyn Patterson
57 Single-subject clinical-outcome research: designs, data, effect sizes, and analyses
111(35)
Randall R. Robey
Martin C. Schultz
Amy B. Crawford
Cheryl A. Sinner
58 Single cases, group studies and case series in aphasia therapy
146(13)
David Howard
59 How can connectionist cognitive models of language inform models of language rehabilitation?
159(41)
Nadine Martin
Matti Laine
Trevor A. Harley
60 Neuroscience insights improve neurorehabilitation of poststroke aphasia
200(27)
Marcelo L. Berthier
Friedemann Pulvermuller
61 Rehabilitation of brain damage: brain plasticity and principles of guided recovery
227(71)
Ian H. Robertson
Jaap M. J. Murre
62 tDCS stimulation segregates words in the brain: evidence from aphasia
298(21)
Valentina Fiori
Susanna Cipollari
Margherita Di Paola
Carmelina Razzano
Carlo Caltagirone
Paola Marangolo
PART 3 Treatment and therapy approaches
319(326)
63 Intensity of aphasia therapy, impact on recovery
321(12)
Sanjit K. Bhogal
Robert Teasell
Mark Speechley
64 Intensity of aphasia therapy: evidence and efficacy
333(19)
Leora R. Cherney
Janet P. Patterson
Anastasia M. Raymer
65 Constraint-induced therapy of chronic aphasia after stroke
352(14)
Friedemann Pulvermuller
Bettina Neininger
Thomas Elbert
Bettina Mohr
Brigitte Rockstroh
Peter Koebbel
Edward Taub
66 Long-term stability of improved language functions in chronic aphasia after constraint-induced aphasia therapy
366(12)
Marcus Meinzer
Daniela Djundja
Gabriela Barthel
Thomas Elbert
Brigitte Rockstroh
67 Clinical diagnosis and treatment of naming disorders
378(31)
Anastasia M. Raymer
68 Re-visiting "semantic facilitation" of word retrieval for people with aphasia: facilitation yes but semantic no
409(35)
David Howard
Julie Hickin
Teresa Redmond
Philippa Clark
Wendy Best
69 Application of semantic feature analysis as a treatment for aphasic dysnomia
444(11)
Mary Boyle
Carl A. Coelho
70 Melodic intonation therapy for aphasia
455(3)
Martin L. Albert
Robert W. Sparks
Nancy A. Helm
71 Melodic intonation therapy: present controversies and future opportunities
458(16)
Ineke Van Der Meulen
Mieke E. Van De Sandt-Koenderman
Gerard M. Ribbers
72 Mapping therapy: a treatment programme for agrammatism
474(41)
Myrna F. Schwartz
Eleanor M. Saffran
Ruth B. Fink
Jessica L. Myers
Nadine Martin
73 Rehabilitation of spelling along the sub-word-level routine
515(29)
Claudio Luzzatti
Camillo Colombo
Mirella Frustaci
Francesca Vitolo
74 Aphasia rehabilitation and the role of computer technology: can we keep up with modern times?
544(14)
W. Mieke E. Van De Sandt-Koenderman
75 Biological approaches to aphasia treatment
558(17)
Steven L. Small
Daniel A. Llano
76 Using conversation analysis to assess and treat people with aphasia
575(16)
Suzanne Beeke
Jane Maxim
Ray Wilkinson
77 Functional outcome: methodological considerations
591(6)
Kevin P. Kearns
78 Supported conversation for adults with aphasia: methods and resources for training conversation partners
597(16)
Aura Kagan
79 The efficacy of outpatient and community-based aphasia group interventions: a systematic review
613(32)
Lucette E. Lanyon
Miranda L. Rose
Linda Worrall
PART 4 Quality of life and psychosocial implications
645(104)
80 The relationship of 60 disease diagnoses and 15 conditions to preference-based health-related quality of life in Ontario hospital-based long-term care residents
647(18)
Jonathan M.C. Lam
Walter P. Wodchis
81 A description of the consequences of aphasia on aphasic persons and their relatives and friends, based on the WHO model of chronic diseases
665(20)
Guylaine Le Dorze
Christine Brassard
82 Living with severe aphasia: tracking social exclusion
685(32)
Susie Parr
83 Depression in acute and chronic aphasia: symptoms, pathoanatomical-clinical correlations and functional implications
717(14)
Manfred Herrmann
Claudius Bartels
Claus-W. Wallesch
84 The emotional impact of aphasia
731(18)
Chris Code
Gayle Hemsley
Manfred Herrmann
Index 749
Chris Code is Professorial Research Fellow in Psychology, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, Washington Singer Labs, University of Exeter, UK. His research interests include the neuropsychology of language and speech, psychosocial consequences of aphasia, aphasia and the evolution of language and speech, recovery and treatment of aphasia, the public awareness of aphasia, the history of aphasia, number processing and apraxia.