1st Edition

36th Clinical Aphasiology Conference A Special Issue of Aphasiology

Edited By Audrey Holland Copyright 2007
    300 Pages
    by Psychology Press

    This is the annual published proceedings of the 36th Clinical Aphasiology Conference (CAC). It was held in Ghent, Belgium, and was the first CAC meeting to be held outside North America. As a result, the 2006 CAC attracted a substantial number of submissions from European researchers and clinicians, many of whom had never attended CAC before. Included in this issue are papers that have been peer reviewed and selected from among the papers and posters presented at CAC. Both theoretical and clinical papers relevant to the provision of clinical services to people with aphasia are included.

    A.L. Holland, Introduction. E. Ruigendijk, S. Baauw, Syntactic and Pragmatic Aspects of Determiner and Pronoun Production in Dutch Agrammatic Brocas Aphasia. A. Tissen, S. Weber, M. Grande, T. Gunther, "Tree Pruning Hypothesis" in Bilingualism. J. Reilly, K. Cross, V. Troiani, M. Grossman, Single Word Semantic Judgments in Semantic Dementia: Do Phonology and Grammatical Class Count? N. Friedmann, A. Gvion, As Far As Individuals with Conduction Aphasia Understood These Sentences were Ungrammatical: Garden Path in Conduction Aphasia. S. Corsten, M. Mende, J. Cholewa, W. Huber, Treatment of Input and Output Phonology in Aphasia: A Single Case Study. M. Walsh Dickey, C.K. Thompson, The Relation Between Syntactic and Morphological Recovery in Agrammatic Aphasia: A Case Study. N. Lallini, N. Miller, D. Howard, Influences on Speech Pproduction in Acquired Output Impairment: A Cross-language Comparison. J.L. Wambaugh, S. Wright, Improved Effects of Word-retrieval Treatments Subsequent to Addition of the Orthographic Form. J.K. Gordon, A Contextual Approach to Facilitating Word Retrieval in Agrammatic Aphasia. A. van der Merwe, Self-correction in Apraxia of Speech: The Effect of Treatment. A. Lorenz, L. Nickels, Minor Orthographic Cueing in Anomic Aphasia: How Does it Work? K. Bowes, N. Martin, Longitudinal Study of Reading and Writing Rehabilitation Using a Bigraph-biphone Correspondence Approach. M.C. Duff, J.A. Hengst, D. Tranel, N.J. Cohen, Talking across Time: Using Reported Speech as a Communicative Resource in Amnesia. V.L. Scharp, C.A. Tompkins, J.M. Iverson, Gesture and Aphasia: Helping Hands? A. Bose, L. Buchanan, A Cognitive and Psycholinguistic Investigation of Neologisms. H. Cote, M. Payer, F. Giroux, Y. Joanette, Towards a Description of Clinical Communication Impairment Profiles Following Right-hemisphere Damage. R.C. Marshall, S.R. McGurk, C.M. Karow, T.J. Kairy, Problem Solving by Subjects With and Without Diffuse Neurologic Involvement. E. Armstrong, H. Ulatowska, Making Stories: Evaluative Language and the Aphasia Experience. M.R. McNeil, J. Eun Sung, D. Yang, S.R. Pratt, T.R.D. Fossett, S. Pavelko, P.J. Doyle, Comparing Connected Language Elicitation Procedures in Person with Aphasia: Concurrent Validation of the Story Retell Procedure. C. Croteau, G. Le Dorze, G. Baril, Development of a Procedure to Evaluate the Contributions of Persons with Aphasia and their Spouses in an Interview Situation. H. Harris Wright, R.A. Downey, M. Gravier, T. Love, L.P. Shapiro, Processing Distinct Linguistic Information Types in Working Memory in Aphasia. T. Frankel, C. Penn, D. Ormond-Brown, Executive Dysfunction as an Explanatory Basis for Conversation Symptoms of Aphasia: A Pilot Study.

    Biography

    Department of Speech and Hearing Sciences

    The University of Arizona