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Integrates basic research and practical clinical information on the
neuropsychology of epilepsy under one cover. Provides inside
knowledge on how neuropsychological assessments are performed and
evaluated. A comprehensive reference that will serve as a clinical
resource for working with epilepsy patients. Epilepsy is a
prevalent condition affecting approximately 1% of the general
population. Its behavioral effects on cognition and memory can be
as debilitating as the physical aspects caused by ongoing seizures.
This book is intended primarily for clinical neuropsychologists who
encounter patients with epilepsy, either through employment in
academic medical centers or in general practice. The book is of
particular value to those working in a comprehensive epilepsy
center, as the volume provides extensive coverage of the many
clinical procedures performed in that setting. Procedures reviewed
in this volume include neuropsychological testing, the Wada
procedures, and brain mapping. Chapters include descriptions of the
purpose of these procedures, reviews of the recent literature,
clinical vignettes, in addition to concrete recommendations on how
to actually conduct the procedures. Many chapters provide examples
of test forms and stimuli useful for conducting some of the
procedures reviewed in this book. Neurologists and pediatricians
will also find this book to be helpful, as many medical
practitioners consider the activities of clinical
neuropsychologists working in their settings to be somewhat
mysterious. This book makes the details of neuropsychological
practice in an epilepsy setting more accessible than what has been
present in prior literature. Content Level Research Keywords Brain
mapping - Children with epilepsy - Cognitive remediation - Epilepsy
- Epilepsy in children - FMRI - MEG - Movement disorder -
Neuropsychological testing - Refractory seizure - Seizure - Seizure
disorder - Wada test Related subjects Neurology - Ne
Once feared and misunderstood even among the medical community,
epilepsy has since largely been demystified. Besides the
characteristic seizures, various cognitive, behavioral, and
emotional difficulties are recognized as associated with the
condition, and patients are finding relief in medical management
and/or surgical intervention. Not surprisingly, neuropsychology has
emerged as a major component in treatment planning, program
development, and assessment of surgical candidates. Geared toward
beginning as well as veteran clinicians, the Handbook on the
Neuropsychology of Epilepsy offers readers a skills-based framework
for assessment and treatment, using current evidence and
standardized terminology. Expert coverage reviews widely-used
methods for evaluating key aspects of patient functioning (MRI,
MEG, electrocortical mapping, the Wada test), and presents
guidelines for psychotherapeutic and cognitive remediation
strategies in treating comorbid psychiatric conditions. Given the
diversity of the patient population, additional chapters spotlight
issues specific to subgroups including high- and low-functioning as
well as geriatric and pediatric patients. This integrative hands-on
approach benefits a range of practitioners across medical and
neurological settings. Topics featured in the Handbook:
Neuropsychological assessment across the lifespan. Evaluating the
epilepsy surgical candidate: methods and procedures. The Wada test:
current perspectives and applications. Assessing psychiatric and
personality disorders in the epilepsy patient. Evaluation and
management of psychogenic non-epileptic attacks. Neuropsychological
assessment with culturally diverse patients. Practical and flexible
in its coverage, the Handbook on the Neuropsychology of Epilepsy
serves not only neuropsychologists and neurologists but also
primary care physicians such as internists, family physicians, and
pediatricians.
Mastering Chess is a unique book in that it covers the essentials
which every aspiring chess player must know well (from Novice to
Expert) to reach the chess Master level. The first edition was
popular for some 20 years (from 1985 - 2005) while in print with
four different publishers (including Pergamon/Oxford, Cadogan and
Everyman/London, Dover / Mineola, NY). It has been rated one of the
five best chess books of its kind. Each Chapter of this new edition
has new material added and the book has essentially doubled in
size. Each Chapter includes new Exercise positions with solutions.
Besides being a self-study self help book, it was designed for
chess teachers and chess courses. First there is a spritely written
1st Chapter on Tactics and Combinations by Geoff Chandler of
Edinburgh Scotland. Mr. Chandler has updated his popular work with
observations of play and missed opportunities from Internet play.
The 2nd Chapter introduces a new author (Life Master Ian Harris)
and a new approach to how openings can be learned. It presents Dr.
Kopec's idea that openings can be learned from the perspective of
the following five goals: 1) Development 2) Center Control 3) King
Safety 4) Space and 5) Material Balance. Dr. Kopec has been
expousing this idea for a number of years in his lectures and chess
camps. If effective, it is a novel way of teaching a subject that
entails volumes and volumes of books over a number of centuries Mr.
Harris has developed this Chapter spanning some 50 pages in
conjunction with Dr. Kopec. Dr. Kopec has added new material to his
Chapter 3: How To Analyze a Position including lessons on the
topics: The Point Count Method, Grand Central Station, and Don't
Believe Everything Your Computer Tells You. New exercises have also
been added at the end of this Chapter. Chapter 4 (by Chris
Morrison) has also been extended with an additional lesson entitled
"Good and Bad Pieces" and number of additional exercises. Chapter 5
(by the late Ian Mullen) has been extended with a lesson entitled
"More Advanced Endings." This Chapter has always proven very useful
for teachers and courses on the endgame. The material is suitable
for players from Novice to Master There are also additional
exercises for this chapter, samples of material which you find in
the new edition of Dr. Kopec's and Hal Terrie's 3rd edition of
"Test, Evaluate, and Improve Your Chess: a knowledge-based
approach" 415 pages, (2013, Createspace / Amazon. Finally, there is
a new Appendix B: including Mastery Lessons by the World Champions
which presents games by World Champions illustrating their skill in
at least one of the five Chapters of the book: 1) Tactics and
Combinations 2) Opening Principles and Ideas 3) How to Analyse a
Position 4) How to Formulate a Plan and 5) Essential Endgame
Knowledge. This is a preview to Dr. Kopec's likely next work -- a
video on The History of the Chess World Championship.
Award-winning sommelier Chris Morrison believes that your wine
decisions should be driven by your own sense of taste - and by the
way you like to eat, drink and live. In This Is Not A Wine Guide he
helps readers develop the confidence to choose, purchase, serve,
share and ultimately even collect wine without feeling the need to
rely on the 'old rules' involving notes, scores, jargon and
reviews. Morrison answers the question all of us ponder when faced
with choosing wine from a wine list or from the bottleshop shelf:
'Where do I start?' This Is Not A Wine Guide tackles the
fundamentals and then moves from the bottle forwards: into the
reasons you choose it, open it and drink it; with what company,
under what circumstances, in what glasses - and with what food.
Because this is a wine book for people who also love food. For
Morrison, food and its taste and textures represent the narrative
that can unlock wine - 'wine doesn't make sense without food'. This
Is Not A Wine Guide is packed with information and advice to help
you get the most out of your wine experience, whether it's cracking
a bottle for a barbecue, navigating a wine list in a restaurant,
wondering what to serve with kimchi, or what to do when the cork
crumbles.
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