All Stories

  1. The 50th annual clinical Aphasiology conference
  2. The Methodological Quality of Short-Term/Working Memory Treatments in Poststroke Aphasia: A Systematic Review
  3. Revisiting the public awareness of aphasia in Exeter: 16 years on
  4. Assessment and treatment of short-term and working memory impairments in stroke aphasia: a practical tutorial
  5. THE DISSOLUTION OF LANGUAGE & SPEECH FOLLOWING BRAIN DAMAGE
  6. Did Leborgne have one or two speech automatisms?
  7. The social cure: Identity, health and well-being
  8. Apportioning time for aphasia rehabilitation
  9. The clinical scientist
  10. The influence of psycholinguistic variables on articulatory errors in naming in progressive motor speech degeneration
  11. Nonfluent aphasia and the evolution of proto-language
  12. Delivering for aphasia
  13. What works?
  14. Lost in translation? Issues of content validity in interpreter-mediated aphasia assessments
  15. Eighteen years on: What next for the PALPA?
  16. Aphasia
  17. Treatment of Chronic Aphasia: International Perspectives
  18. Outcome of a One-Month Therapy Intensive for Chronic Aphasia: Variable Individual Responses
  19. Opportunities to say ‘yes’: Rare speech automatisms in a case of progressive nonfluent aphasia and apraxia
  20. First in, last out? The evolution of aphasic lexical speech automatisms to agrammatism and the evolution of human communication
  21. Phonological Analysis of a Case of Progressive Speech Degeneration
  22. Communication impairment in the AIDS dementia complex (ADC): A case report
  23. Auditory task presentation reveals predominantly right hemispheric fMRI activation patterns during mental calculation
  24. Common brain regions underlying different arithmetic operations as revealed by conjunct fMRI–BOLD activation
  25. On the cause of stuttering: Integrating theory with brain and behavioral research
  26. Pragmatic skills in people with HIV/AIDS
  27. The form of representation of language in the brain and the influence of John C. Marshall
  28. Syntactic impairments can emerge later: Progressive agrammatic agraphia and syntactic comprehension impairment
  29. Waving not drowning: Utilising gesture in the treatment of aphasia
  30. First in, last out?
  31. Phonetic and phonological analysis of progressive speech degeneration: a case study
  32. Classic Cases in Neuropsychology
  33. Training communication partners of people with traumatic brain injury: A randomised controlled trial
  34. Lexical and non-lexical speech automatisms in aphasic Cantonese speakers
  35. Services for aphasia, other acquired adult neurogenic communication and swallowing disorders in the United Kingdom, 2000
  36. The quantity of life for people with chronic aphasia
  37. Vocalisation and the development of hand preference
  38. Supported Self-Help Groups for Aphasic People
  39. Describing participants in aphasia research: Part 1. Audit of current practice
  40. The relevance of emotional and psychosocial factors in aphasia to rehabilitation
  41. What is aphasia? Results of an international survey
  42. Editorial
  43. Multifactorial Processes in Recovery from Aphasia: Developing the Foundations for a Multileveled Framework
  44. Profiling the Membership of Self-Help Groups for Aphasic People
  45. Assessment and management of aphasia in a linguistically diverse society
  46. Not Fractionating, Converging
  47. Re-assembling the brain: Are cell assemblies the brain's language for recovery of function?
  48. Preface
  49. Notes and Discussion Perceptions of psychosocial adjustment to acquired communication disorders: applications of the Code-Muller Protocols
  50. Perceptions of Psychosocial Adjustment to Aphasia: Applications of the Code-Müller Protocols
  51. The Emotional Impact of Aphasia
  52. What Do Speech Pathologists Know About HIV?
  53. Hypotheses on the dissociation between “referential” and “modalizing” verbal behavior in aphasia
  54. Models, theories and heuristics in apraxia of speech
  55. Instrumental Clinical Phonetics
  56. Book review
  57. Can the Right Hemisphere Speak?
  58. Aphasia therapy
  59. Weightings of items on the Code–Müller Protocols: The effects of clinical experience of aphasia therapy
  60. The impact of neurogenic communication disorders: beyond the impairment
  61. A new perspective on the relationship between communication impairment and disempowerment following head injury in information exchanges
  62. Interactions between recovery in aphasia, emotional and psychosocial factors in subjects with aphasia, their significant others and speech pathologists
  63. Asymmetries in Ear Movements and Eyebrow Raising in Men and Women and Right- and Left-Handers
  64. Syllabification in aphasic recurring utterances: contributions of sonority theory
  65. Predicting Recovery from Aphasia with Connectionist Networks: Preliminary Comparisons with Multiple Regression
  66. Speech automatism production in aphasia
  67. Non-segmental aspects of disordered speech: Developments in transcription
  68. Right hemisphere and verbal communication
  69. Aphasia therapy (2nd ed.). Chris Code and Dave Müller (Eds.). London: Cole and Whurr, 1989. Pp. i + 236.
  70. Language, aphasia, and the right hemisphere. Chris Code. Chichester: Wiley, 1987. Pp. 205. Illustrated.
  71. Book review
  72. Aphasia from the wrong (right) hemisphere: Questions for crossed aphasia
  73. Age and aphasia type: The interaction of sex, time since onset and handedness
  74. Editorials
  75. LANGUAGE IN DEMENTIA OF RECENT REFERRAL
  76. Treating severe speech and limb apraxia in a case of aphasia
  77. On “Neurolinguistic Analysis of Recurrent Utterances in Aphasia”: Reply to de Bleser and Poeck
  78. Predicting Psychosocial Adjustment to Aphasia
  79. Neurolinguistic Analysis of Recurrent Utterance in Aphasia
  80. On the Origins of Recurrent Utterances in Aphasia
  81. Delayed Auditory Feedback and Auditory Feedback Masking with Stammerers and Normal Speakers
  82. Genuine and Artificial Stammering: an EMG Comparison
  83. Experimental Audioperceptual Techniques
  84. Classic Cases
  85. Aphasia recovery, treatment and psychosocial adjustment