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There are very few books available which are concerned with the unique communication problems that can come with traumatic brain injury (TBI). In recent years there has emerged a realisation that these difficulties in communication are closely tied to the cognitive, behavioural and social problems observed following traumatic brain injury. This is changing the way people with TBI are assessed and is generating new approaches to rehabilitation. This volume will be of interest to psychologists, speech pathologists and therapists and linguists. Clinicians and researchers working with people with traumatic brain injury, and their students, will find it a comprehensive source of contemporary approaches to characterising the communication problems of people with TBI and for planning rehabilitation.
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Provides an up to date overview of social cognition deficits in
clinical populations. Describes how social cognition manifests
across a range of neurodevelopmental and acquired conditions,
across the lifespan Summarizes how social cognition is assessed and
measured Reviews the current status of research on intervention to
prevent or remediate poor social outcomes
Provides an up to date overview of social cognition deficits in
clinical populations. Describes how social cognition manifests
across a range of neurodevelopmental and acquired conditions,
across the lifespan Summarizes how social cognition is assessed and
measured Reviews the current status of research on intervention to
prevent or remediate poor social outcomes
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) can seriously disrupt the social and
communication skills that are basic requirements for everyday life.
It is the loss of these interpersonal skills that can be the most
devastating for people with TBI and their families. Although there
are many books that focus upon TBI, none focus on communication and
communication skills specifically. This book fills this important
gap in the literature and provides information ranging from a broad
overview of the nature of pathology following TBI and its effects
on cognition and behaviour, through to the latest evidence about
ways to assess and treat social and communication disorders. Much
has changed in the field of communication disorders and TBI since
the first edition of this book was published in 1999. There have
been advances in neuroimaging, providing more accurate
understanding of how the brain is damaged in TBI and also insights
into its repair. There has been a burgeoning interest in social
cognition, and advances in how communication is conceptualized,
with a particular focus on the role of how context facilitates or
impedes communicative ability. Most importantly, much has changed
in the arena of rehabilitation. There is now a growing evidence
base of treatments aimed at improving communication problems
following TBI, new resources for accessing this information and
renewed interest in different kinds of methods for demonstrating
treatment effects. Bringing together a range of expert
international researchers interested in understanding the nature
and treatment of TBI this book covers topics from understanding how
the brain damage occurs, how it affects social and communication
skills and how these problems might be treated. As such it will be
of great interest to clinicians, postgraduate and undergraduate
students and researchers in neuropsychology, speech and language
pathology.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) can seriously disrupt the social and
communication skills that are basic requirements for everyday life.
It is the loss of these interpersonal skills that can be the most
devastating for people with TBI and their families. Although there
are many books that focus upon TBI, none focus on communication and
communication skills specifically. This book fills this important
gap in the literature and provides information ranging from a broad
overview of the nature of pathology following TBI and its effects
on cognition and behaviour, through to the latest evidence about
ways to assess and treat social and communication disorders. Much
has changed in the field of communication disorders and TBI since
the first edition of this book was published in 1999. There have
been advances in neuroimaging, providing more accurate
understanding of how the brain is damaged in TBI and also insights
into its repair. There has been a burgeoning interest in social
cognition, and advances in how communication is conceptualized,
with a particular focus on the role of how context facilitates or
impedes communicative ability. Most importantly, much has changed
in the arena of rehabilitation. There is now a growing evidence
base of treatments aimed at improving communication problems
following TBI, new resources for accessing this information and
renewed interest in different kinds of methods for demonstrating
treatment effects. Bringing together a range of expert
international researchers interested in understanding the nature
and treatment of TBI this book covers topics from understanding how
the brain damage occurs, how it affects social and communication
skills and how these problems might be treated. As such it will be
of great interest to clinicians, postgraduate and undergraduate
students and researchers in neuropsychology, speech and language
pathology.
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