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Forums in Clinical Aphasiology [1996]

1
Issues in Clinical Aphasiology
5
Reapportioning Time for Aphasia Rehabilitation: A Point of View
20
Global Aphasia: The Case for Treatment
25
Is There Support for Assumptions Underlying ‘Reapportioning Time for Aphasia Rehabilitation: A Point of View’?
30
Comments on ‘Reapportioning Time for Aphasia Rehabilitation: A Point of View’ ‐ Suggestion in Search of Support
34
Reply to Wertz, Edelman and Parsons
39
The Cognitive Cloud and Language Disorders
50
Commentary: Carving the Cognitive Chicken
56
Biological Constraints on the Description of Cognitive Functions: A Silver Lining in the Cloud?
60
Language and Cognition ‒ Problems of Their Vivisection
65
Cognitive Cloud: Thunderheads on the Horizon?
65
Cognitive Science and the Language/Cognition Distinction
71
Reply: On Carved Chickens, Silver Linings, Vivisection, and Thunderheads
79
The Relation of Aphasia to Dementia
92
Dementia and Dysphasia: ‘Like Asking a Blind Man to Describe an Elephant’
97
Language Disorders in Dementia as Aphasia Syndromes
102
Alzheimer versus Broca and Wernicke
105
Studies of Dementia: In Search of the Linguistic/Cognitive Interaction Underlying Communication
108
Aphasia and Dementia: Steps Towards a New Era in Neuropsychology
111
Reply: Language in Dementia: Agreement?
113
Assessing for Treatment
117
Aphasia Tests Reconsidered
142
Cognitive Psychology and Clinical Aphasiology
145
What Should be the Core of Aphasia Tests? (The Authors Promise but Fail to Deliver)
150
Aphasia Assessment: The Acid Tests
155
Diagnostic Tests as Tools of Assessment and Models of Information Processing: A Gap to Bridge
160
Missing the Wood and the Trees: A Reply to David, Kertesz, Goodglass and Weniger
169
Using the PICA in Clinical Practice: Are We Flogging a Dead Horse?
175
Don't Throw Out the Porch with the Bathwater: A Second Look at the Future of the PICA
179
To Be or Not to Be: The PICA is the Question
182
The PICA Revisited
187
Using the PICA in Clinical Practice: A Reply to Di Simon and Merson, Crocket and Purves, and Martin
189
Functional Assessment of Communication: Merging Public Policy with Clinical Views
210
Functional Communication Assessment and Intervention: Some Thoughts on the State of the Art
219
Functional Communication Assessment and Intervention: Implications for the Rehabilitation of Aphasic People: Reply to Carol Frattali
225
Functional Assessment: A Clinical Perspective
228
Functional Communication Assessment: An Australian Perspective
234
Beyond Barriers: A Reply to Chapey, Sacchett and Marshall, Scherzer, and Worrall
241
Computers in Clinical Aphasiology
243
Efficacy of Aphasia Treatment Using Microcomputers
252
Microcomputers in Assessment, Rehabilitation and Recreation
258
Unfounded Expectations: Computers in Rehabilitation
261
Cognition First, Microprocessor Second
264
Microcomputers and Treatment of Aphasia
270
Reply: Common Ground
275
Computer‐Based Aphasia Treatment Meets Artificial Intelligence
290
Where the Intelligent Therapist Fears to Tread: Commentary on Guyard <fi>et al.</fi>
295
Intelligent Computerized Treatment or Artificial Aphasia Therapy?
299
Artificial Intelligence Enters Speech Therapy: A Comment on Guyard <fi>et al.</fi>
304
Introducing Artificial Intelligence into Aphasiological Data Analysis: Answers
309
Psychosocial Issues
313
The Grief Response in Neuropathologies of Speech and Language
319
Response to Tanner and Gerstenberger
322
Brain, Cognition and Grief
326
Relationships Between Emotional and Linguistic Impairment in Aphasia
328
Responses to Grief? Responses to Commentaries
333
Aphasia and Family Therapy
337
Aphasia and Family Therapy: Innovative, but Untested
340
Response to Aphasia and Family Therapy
342
Aphasiology and Family Therapy — Development of the Subject
344
On the Possible Value of Family Therapy in Aphasia Rehabilitation
346
Aphasia and Family Therapy: A Reply to Smith, McGuirk, Knapik and Herrmann
349
Losing Your Sense of Self: What Aphasia Can Do?
355
Empathy and Aphasia Rehabilitation ‒ Are There Contradictory Requirements of Treatment and Psychological Support?
359
The Point of View of the Clinician
361
Finding a New Sense of Self: What the Clinician Can Do to Help
364
Concern for the Aphasic Person's Sense of Self: Why, Who and How?
369
Response: The Primacy of Self
373
Index
i
Frontmatter
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