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Aphasiology 1998: Vol 12 Table of Contents PDF

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APHASIOLOGY CONTENTS OF VOLUME 12 NUMBER1 JANUARY 1998 SPECIAL ISSUE: Issues in Chinese Aphasia Guest Editors: Brendan Weekes and May Jane Chen Editorial B. Weekes and M. ]. Chen Papers The dissociation between nouns and verbs in Broca’s and Wernicke’s aphasia: findings from Chinese §. Chen and E. Bates Classification of aphasic Chinese speakers: cluster and discriminant function analyses E. Yiu, L. Worrall and T. Baglioni Sentence comprehension in Cantonese Chinese aphasic patients S.-P. Law and M.-T. Leung Chinese pure alexia Y. Wengang and B. Butterworth \nomia and dyslexia in Chinese: a familiar story? B. S. Weekes, M. J. Chen, H. C. Qun, Y. B. Lin, C. Yao and X. Y. Xiao NUMBER 2 FEBRUARY 1998 Paper Diversity in the lexical and syntactic abilities of fluent aphasic speakers §. Edwards and R. Bastiaanse Clinical Forum Clinical research needs and issues in bilingual aphasia P. M. Roberts Bilingualism: a neglected and chaotic area A. Ardila Bilingual aphasia: the central importance of social and cultural factors in clinically oriented research P. Roger Bilingual aphasia research is not a tabula rasa F. Fabbro Reply: Bilingual aphasia: some answers and more questions P. M. Roberts Case Studies Spatial or afferent agraphia without left-sided neglect B. Croisile andO . Hibert Phonological and articulatory disturbances in a case of primary progressive Southwood and A. Chatterjee Extending conversation analysis to non-verbal communication K. Bryan, ]. McIntosh and D. Brown Book Review Announcement NUMBER 3 MARCH 1998 Paper Language impairment in Parkinson’s disease F. M. Lewis, L. L. LaPointe, B. E. Murdoch and H. |. Chenery Clinical Forum Beyond the ‘plateau’: discharge dilemmas in chronic aphasia D. Hers/ Discharge in chronic aphasia: a multidisciplinary approach Z. Bonta and D. Weber Therapy for life: finding new paths across the plateau ( Pound Memories of the ‘plateau’: health-care changes provide an opportunity to redefine aphasia treatment and discharge R. |]. Elman \ solution to the discharge dilemma in aphasia: social approaches to aphasia management N.. Simmons- Mackie Reply: Beyond the ‘ plateau’—but with a map D. Hersh Case Studies How selective are selective word class deficits? Two case studies of action and object naming R. Jonkers and R. Bastiaanse Changes in aspects of speech and language functioning following unilateral pallidotomy C. F. Legg and B. R. Sonnenberg Recovery process of colour naming defects in pure alexia—a five year longitudinal experimental study K. Fukuzawa, S. Sasanuma, 1. Tatsumi, T. Suzuki and Y. Fukusako Announcement NUMBERS 4-5 APRIL-—MAY 1998 SPECIAL ISSUE: Lexical Retrieval Disorders Guest Editors: Matti Laine and Nadine Martin Introduction Ml. Laine and N. Martin Papers Stages of lexical retrieval H. Goodolass The semantic deficit in dementia: connectionist approaches to what goes wrong in picture naming T. A. Harle) Lexical retrieval mechanisms underlying whole-word perseveration errors in anomic aphasia N). Martin, A. Roach, A. Brecher and ]. Lower) When reading a sentence is easier than reading a ‘little’ word: the role of production processes in deep dyslexics’ reading aloud N. Silverbe rg, G. | iglioce 0, D. Insala 0 and M. Garrett Naming problems in dementia: semantic or lexical? 1. ]. 1stel/ and 2 1. Harley The preservation of sonority in the context of impaired lexical-phonological output S. E. Kohn, ]. Melvold and V. Shipper Self-cueing of word retrieval by a woman with aphasia: why a letter board works D. Howard and D. Harding NUMBER 6 JUNE 1998 Paper The effect of stimulus presentation rate on syntax test performance in brain-injured adolescents L. S. Turkstra Clinical Forum Diversity in aphasiology: crisis or increasing competence? B. Petheram and S. Parr Diversity in aphasiology: a crisis in practice or a problem of definition? R. Bastiaanse and S. Edwards Do we really need non-quantitative approaches in aphasiology? S. F. 4 appa Diversity in aphasiology: let us embrace it R. J. Elman Explicit integration of approaches to aphasia 1 Fe reuson \ meta-theory of aphasiology: deficit or asset? ] K Gordon ‘Diversity in aphasiology’: a social science perspective L.. Jordan Reply: Plenty of room in the wardrobe: a response to Bastiaanse and Edwards, Cappa, Elman, Ferguson, Gordon and Jordan B. Petheram and S. Parr Case Study \cute mixed transcortical aphasia following an infarction in the left putamen N. Nagaratnam and |. S. Gilhotra Book Review NUMBERS 7-8 JULY-AUGUST 1998 27th Clinical Aphasiology Conference Editor: Donald A. Robin Preface Donald A. Robin Papers \ comparison of the mismatch negativity (MMN) event-related potential to tone and speech stimuli in normal and aphasic adults R. T. Wertz, L. L. Auther, G. P. Burch-Sims, R. Abou-Khalil, H. §. Kirshner and G. W. Duncan Investigating the predictors of lifestyle satisfaction among younger adults with chronic aphasia ]. |. Hinckley \ssessing treatment efficacy in acute aphasia: paradoxes, presumptions, problems and principles C. W. Linebaugh, C. R. Baron and K. ]. Corcoran Verb preference effects in the sentence comprehension of fluent aphasic individuals K. D. Russo, R. K. Peach and L. P. Shapiro Conversational discourse analysis: appropriate and useful sample sizes L. Boles and T. Bombard The effects of concurrent picture presentations on retelling of orally presented stories by adults with aphasia P. J. Doyle, M. R. McNeil, K. A. Spencer, A. Jackson Goda, K. Cottrell and A. P. Lustig Effects of training multiple form classes on acquisition, generalization and maintenance of word retrieval in a single subject M. R. MeNeil, P. J. Doyle, K. Spencer, A. Jackson Goda, D. Flores and S$. L. Small Rule-based treatment for acquired phonological dyslexia D. L. Kendall, M. R. McNeil and S. L. Small Beyond frequency: predicting auditory word recognition in normal elderly adults i. Baumgaertner and C. A. Tompkins Discourse in healthy old-elderly adults: a longitudinal study H. K. Ulatowska, S. B. Chapman, A. Peterson Highley and ]. Prince Dissolution of spoken language in primary progressive aphasia M. A. Rogers and N. B. Alarcon Longitudinal treatment of primary progressive aphasia: a case study L. L. Marra) The fluency dimension in aphasia J. K. Gordon Perseverative behaviour in fluent and non-fluent aphasic adults N. Helm-Estabrooks, A. Ramage, K. A. Bayles and R. Cruz Generalized motor programme and parameterization accuracy in apraxia of speech and conduction aphasia H. M. Clark and D. A. Robin Single word intelligibility in aphasia and apraxia of speech K. L. Haley, R. T. Wertz and R. N. Ohde Treatment for apraxia of speech: effects of targeting sound groups ]. L. Wambaugh, J]. E. West and P. J. Doyle Linguistic contextual influences on categorization skills after traumatic brain injury M. Strauss Hough, B. Overton Fox and §. DeMarco Use of politeness markers with different communication partners: an investigation of five subjects with traumatic brain injury L.. Togher and 1. Hand Reliability and validity of an auditory working memory measure: data from elderly and right-hemisphere damaged adults M. T. Lehman and C. A. Tompkins NUMBER9Y SEPTEMBER 1998 Review \ model for conducting clinical-outcome research: an adaptation of the standard protocol for use in aphasiology R. R. Robey and M. C. Schultz Clinical Forum An introduction to supported conversation for adults with aphasia: perspectives, problems and possibilities R. C. Marshall Supported conversation for adults with aphasia: methods and resources for training conversation partners A. Kagan In support of supported conversation for adults with aphasia N. Simmons-Mackie Clinician—researcher dilemmas: comment on ‘Supported conversation for adults with aphasia’ C. Penn Why can’t clinicians talk to aphasic adults? Comments on supported conversation for adults with aphasia: methods and resources for training conversational partners 1. LL. Holland Breaking new ground in familiar territory: a comment on ‘ Supported conversation for adults with aphasia’, by Aura Kagan §. Parr and S. Byng Reply: Philosophical, practical and evaluative issues associated with ‘Supported conversation for adults with aphasia’ 1. Kagan NUMBER10 OCTOBER 1998 Review Conduction aphasia—11 classic cases K. Kohler, C. Bartels, M. Herrmann, ]. Dittmann and Wallesch Papers Semantic paralexias in the Spanish language 1. Ardila Race, gender, and educational level effects on Boston Naming Test scores LL. W. Henderson, E. M. Frank, T. Pivatt, R. K. Abramson Wa V Houston Using individual and group therapy to remediate word finding difficulties C. Eales and T. Pring The psycholinguistics of auditory hallucinations I Vf ] hDompson and D L. Coapo/lat Case Study Situation-specific training for adults with aphasia: an example ri lop pe r and A. Holland Tribute Anton Leischner’s contributions to aphasiology C.-W. Wallesch Announcement NUMBER11 NOVEMBER 1998 Papers Verb retrieval in action naming and spontaneous speech in agrammatic and anomic aphasia R. Bastiaanse and R. Jonkers Spontaneous verbal repetition: a social strategy in aphasic conversation M. L. Ocelschlaeger and J]. S. Damico Influence of rate of treatment on the naming abilities of adults with chronic aphasia ]. ]. Hinckley and H. K. Craig Conversational turn-taking and repair in fluent aphasia 1. Ferguson Book Review NUMBER 12. DECEMBER 1998 Paper Acquisition and generalization of mode interchange skills in people with severe aphasia H. Yoshihata, T. Watamori, T. Chujo and K. Masuyama Clinical Forum SCEMA: a team-based approach to serving secondary students with executive dysfunction following brain injury M. M. Sohlberg, B. Todis and A. Glang SCEMA: the role of school personnel J. Blosser Serving adolescents with acquired brain injury: Comments on SCEMA M. Yilvisaker and T. Feeney) The SCEMA scheme: a worthy project as yet underspecified, overestimated and unproven Be McDonald Bridging the gap between research and education reintegration: direct instruction on processing connected discourse §. B. Chapman Reply: SCEMA: the future challenge M. M. Sohblberg, A. Glang and B. Todis Case Study Advantage of semantic language therapy in chronic aphasia: a study of three cases J. M. Annoni, A. Khateb, M. C. Custodi, V. Debeauvais, C. M. Michel and T. Landises Book Review Announcement Acknowledgements Index of Authors

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