14 February 2012

Aphasia Ppts and publications



What is aphasia?
Aphasia is an impairment of language, affecting the production or comprehension of speech and the ability to read or write. Aphasia is always due to injury to the brain-most commonly from a stroke, particularly in older individuals. But brain injuries resulting in aphasia may also arise from head trauma, from brain tumors, or from infections.

Adult Aphasia and Other Cognitive-Based Dysfunctions
CDD%202251/0131722514_pp8.ppt

Aphasia Treatment Strategies
http://hypermanymedia.wku.edu/ts.ppt

Assessing  Aphasia and Neurogenic CDs
Assessing%20Aphasia%20and%20Neurogenic%20CDs.ppt

Types  of Aphasia
by Antonio  Damasio
ClassNotes/ling411-05.ppt

Aphasia: Symptoms and Syndromes
ClassNotes/ling411-04.ppt

Aphasia
by Kiley Hill
Aphasia.ppt

Aphasia –  Treatment effectiveness and evidence based  practice Treatment Efficacy
Treatment%20effectiveness%20and%20EBP.ppt


Latest 50 published articles

  1. Erwin gustav niessl von mayendorf and his impact on the conceptional history of aphasia.
  2. Simple motor aphasia caused by cerebral infarction treated with blood-pricking at Yamen (GV 15) combined with language training.
  3. A bridge between a lonely soul and the surrounding world: A study on existential consequences of being closely related to a person with aphasia.
  4. A case of semantic variant primary progressive aphasia with severe insular atrophy.
  5. A comparison of intention and pantomime gesture treatment for noun retrieval in people with aphasia.
  6. Aphasia induced by gliomas growing in the ventrolateral frontal region: Assessment with diffusion MR tractography, functional MR imaging and neuropsychology.
  7. Aphasia rehabilitation: more than treating the language disorder.
  8. Aphasia.
  9. Assessing neuropsychiatric disturbances associated with post-stroke aphasia.
  10. Attention and Other Cognitive Deficits in Aphasia: Presence and Relation to Language and Communication Measures.
  11. Atypical associations to abstract words in Broca's aphasia.
  12. Changes in maps of language function and the integrity of the arcuate fasciculus after therapy for chronic aphasia.
  13. Changes in white matter integrity follow excitatory rTMS treatment of post-stroke aphasia.
  14. Computer-Mediated Assessment of Intelligibility in Aphasia and Apraxia of Speech.
  15. Constrained vs. Unconstrained Intensive Language Therapy in Two Individuals with Chronic, Moderate-to-Severe Aphasia and Apraxia of Speech: Behavioral and fMRI Outcomes.
  16. Decision making cognition in primary progressive aphasia.
  17. Decreasing cues for a dynamic list of noun and verb naming targets: A case-series aphasia therapy study.
  18. De-novo simple partial status epilepticus presenting as Wernicke's aphasia.
  19. Dissociations Between Fluency And Agrammatism In Primary Progressive Aphasia.
  20. Effects of Word Frequency and Modality on Sentence Comprehension Impairments in People with Aphasia.
  21. Excellent recovery of aphasia in a patient with complete injury of the arcuate fasciculus in the dominant hemisphere.
  22. First decade of research on constrained-induced treatment approaches for aphasia rehabilitation.
  23. FOXP2, APOE, and PRNP: New Modulators in Primary Progressive Aphasia.
  24. Guiding principles for printed education materials: Design preferences of people with aphasia.
  25. Hermann Oppenheim's Observations about Music in Aphasia.
  26. Left hemisphere plasticity and aphasia recovery.
  27. Lexical and Prosodic Effects on Syntactic Ambiguity Resolution in Aphasia.
  28. Living successfully with aphasia: A qualitative meta-analysis of the perspectives of individuals with aphasia, family members, and speech-language pathologists.
  29. Living successfully with aphasia: family members share their views.
  30. Model Choice and Sample Size in Item Response Theory Analysis of Aphasia Tests.
  31. Modifying health outcome measures for people with aphasia.
  32. Noninvasive brain stimulation in the treatment of aphasia: Exploring interhemispheric relationships and their implications for neurorehabilitation.
  33. Prestroke/poststroke fMRI in aphasia: Perilesional hemodynamic activation and language recovery.
  34. Providing audiological services to people with aphasia: Considerations, preliminary recommendations, and a call for research.
  35. Reading and writing with aphasia in the 21st century: technological applications of supported reading comprehension and written expression.
  36. Rehabilitation targeted at everyday communication: can we change the talk of people with aphasia and their significant others within conversation?
  37. Revealing and quantifying the impaired phonological analysis underpinning impaired comprehension in Wernicke's aphasia.
  38. Semantic interference during object naming in agrammatic and logopenic primary progressive aphasia (PPA).
  39. Short-term memory treatment: Patterns of learning and generalisation to sentence comprehension in a person with aphasia.
  40. Singing therapy can be effective for a patient with severe nonfluent aphasia.
  41. Slowly progressive Foix-Chavany-Marie syndrome as a precursor of a primary progressive aphasia.
  42. Statistical mapping analysis of brain metabolism in patients with subcortical aphasia after intracerebral hemorrhage: a pilot study of F-18 FDG PET images.
  43. The clinical application of the arcuate fasciculus for stroke patients with aphasia: a diffusion tensor tractography study.
  44. The Differential Contributions of pFC and Temporo-parietal Cortex to Multimodal Semantic Control: Exploring Refractory Effects in Semantic Aphasia.
  45. Transcranial magnetic stimulation and aphasia rehabilitation.
  46. Using phonemic cueing of spontaneous naming to predict item responsiveness to therapy for anomia in aphasia.
  47. Verbal and nonverbal memory impairment in aphasia.
  48. 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.
  49. What are the important factors in health-related quality of life for people with aphasia? A systematic review.
  50. Whole-brain white matter disruption in semantic and nonfluent variants of primary progressive aphasia.

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