Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9781609181376 Academic Inspection Copy

Neuroplasticity and Rehabilitation

Description
Table of
Contents
Google
Preview
Brain plasticity is the focus of a growing body of research with significant implications for neurorehabilitation. This state-of-the-art volume explores ways in which brain-injured individuals may be helped not only to compensate for their loss of cognitive abilities, but also possibly to restore those abilities. Expert contributors examine the extent to which damaged cortical regions can actually recover and resume previous functions, as well as how intact regions are recruited to take on tasks once mediated by the damaged region. Evidence-based rehabilitation approaches are reviewed for a range of impairments and clinical populations, including both children and adults.
1. Introduction: Current Approaches to Rehabilitation, Sarah A. Raskin I. Reorganization in the Central Nervous System2. Neuronal Organization and Change after Brain Injury, Bryan Kolb, Jan Cioe, and Preston Williams3. Experience-Dependent Changes in Nonhumans, Theresa A. Jones4. Motor and Sensory Reorganization in Primates, Randolph J. Nudo and Scott Bury5. Cognitive Reserve, Yaakov Stern6. Practice-Related Changes in Brain Activity, Sarah A. Raskin, Ginger N. Mills and Julianne T. GarbarinoII. Interventions for Motor and Cognitive Deficits7. Activity-Based Interventions for Neurorehabilitation, David M. Morris and C. Scott Bickel8. Malleability and Plasticity in the Neural Systems for Reading and Dyslexia, Bennett A. Shaywitz and Sally E. Shaywitz9. Neuroplasticity and Rehabilitation of Attention in Children, Jennifer A. Engle and Kimberly A. Kerns10. Language Therapy, Susan A. Leon, Lynn M. Maher, and Leslie J. Gonzalez Rothi11. Plasticity of High-Order Cognition: A Review of Experience-Induced Remediation Studies for Executive Deficits, Redmond G. O'Connell and Ian H. Robertson12. Neuroplasticity and the Treatment of Executive Deficits: Conceptual Considerations, Rema A. Lillie and Catherine A. Mateer13. What Rehabilitation Clinicians Can Do to Facilitate Experience- Dependent Learning, McKay M. Sohlberg and Laurie Ehlhardt14. Pharmacological Therapies, Rehabilitation, and Neuroplasticity, John C. Freeland
Google Preview content