Clinical Neuropsychology is a vast and varied field that focuses on the treatment, assessment and diagnosis of a range of cognitive disorders through a study and understanding of neuroanatomy and the relationship between the brain and human behavior.
This handbook focuses on specific Neuropsychological disorders. It covers each of the classification systems involved before moving on to specific types of disorders from neurodevelopmental to neuropathological as well as brain injuries, trauma and neurodegenerative disorders.
This handbook not only provides an in-depth overview of these Neuropsychological disorders, but also explores the history of the field as well its global challenges.
The handbook is an essential tool for clinicians and scientists, as well as postgraduate students and researchers in a range of disciplines exploring the area.
PART I BACKGROUND CONSIDERATIONS
PART II NEURODEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS
PART III NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS
PART IV NEUROCOGNITIVE DISORDERS
PART V TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
PART VI PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS
Show moreClinical Neuropsychology is a vast and varied field that focuses on the treatment, assessment and diagnosis of a range of cognitive disorders through a study and understanding of neuroanatomy and the relationship between the brain and human behavior.
This handbook focuses on specific Neuropsychological disorders. It covers each of the classification systems involved before moving on to specific types of disorders from neurodevelopmental to neuropathological as well as brain injuries, trauma and neurodegenerative disorders.
This handbook not only provides an in-depth overview of these Neuropsychological disorders, but also explores the history of the field as well its global challenges.
The handbook is an essential tool for clinicians and scientists, as well as postgraduate students and researchers in a range of disciplines exploring the area.
PART I BACKGROUND CONSIDERATIONS
PART II NEURODEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS
PART III NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS
PART IV NEUROCOGNITIVE DISORDERS
PART V TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
PART VI PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS
Show moreChapter 1: History and Advances in Clinical Neuropsychology -
Gregory J. Boyle, Charles J. Golden, S.-H. Annabel Chen, Tatia
M.-C. Lee, Dan J. Stein, Yaakov Stern, and Barbara J. Sahakian
Part 1: Background Considerations
Chapter 2: Role of DSM-5, ICD-11, and ICF/ICIDH-2 in
Neuropsychological - Hannah E. Brunet, Mary L. Malik, Larry E.
Beutler
Chapter 3: Neuropsychological applications related to the Research
Domain Criteria (RDoC) - Scott A. Langenecker, Katie L. Bessette,
Rebecca E. Easter, Leah Thomas, Mary L. Phillips, Mindy
Westlund-Schreiner
Chapter 4: Clinical Neuropsychology in the Era of Neuroimaging -
Dominique Makowski, S.-H. Annabel Chen, Rasmus Rosenberg Larsen,
Scott O. Lilienfeld
Chapter 5: Genomics and phenomics - Katherine Lopez, Ruben C. Gur,
Raquel E. Gur
Chapter 6: Neurobiology of Decision-Making - Jon E. Grant, Austin
Blum
Chapter 7: Sex differences in neurocognitive domains - Ruben C.
Gur, Katherine Lopez, Tyler M. Moore, Raquel E. Gur
Chapter 8: Cognitive Reserve in Healthy Aging and Neurodegenerative
Disease - Eleanna Varangis, Anja Soldan, Yaakov Stern
Chapter 9: Global challenges in neuropsychology - Boyle et al.
Part 2: Neurodevelopmental Disease
Chapter 10: Intellectual disabilities - Kerim Munir
Chapter 11: Communication disorders - Deanna Swain, Rebecca Elias,
Elysha Clark-Whitney, So Hyun Kim
Chapter 12: Autism spectrum disorder - Li Fei, Mingyu Xu, Juehua
Yu, Miao Cao
Chapter 13: Attention-deficit/Hyperactivity disorder - Alysa E.
Doyle, David R. Coghill, Tobias Banaschewski
Chapter 14: Specific learning disorders - H. Lee Swanson, Jennifer
Kong, Stefania Petcu
Chapter 15: Motor disorders - Andrea E. Cavanna, Andrea Nani
Part 3: Neurological Disorders
Chapter 16: Motor neuron disease and related autoimmune disorder -
Niall P. Pender, Marwa Elamin, Thomas Burke, Orla Hardiman
Chapter 17: Multiple sclerosis and other demyelinating disorders -
Peter A. Arnett, Anthony Feinstein, John DeLuca
Chapter 18: Disorders of Purposeful Movements: Motor Intentional
and Apraxic Disorders - Parunyou Julayanont, Kenneth M. Heilman
Chapter 19: Epileptic disorders - Gus A Baker, Sallie A.
Baxendale
Chapter 20: Aphasias - Alfredo Ardila, Monica Rosselli
Chapter 21: Normal pressure hydrocephalus - Kayci L. Vickers,
Robert McGovern, Felicia C. Goldstein
Chapter 22: Parkinson’s Disease - Angelo Antonini, Roberta
Biundo
Chapter 23: Huntington’s disease - Julie C. Stout, Sarah L. Mason,
Maria A. Rossetti
Part 4: Neurocognitive Disorders
Chapter 24: Delirium and Neuropsychological Disturbances - David J.
Meagher, Dimitrios Adamis
Chapter 25: Mild cognitive impairment - Junhong Yu, Charlene L. M.
Lam, Tatia Mei-Chun Lee
Chapter 26: Alzheimer’s disease - Michael M. Saling, Charles
Malpas, Rachel F. Buckley
Chapter 27: Frontotemporal lobar - Megan Barker, Hannah Silverman,
Stephanie Cosentino
Chapter 28: Lewy body disease - David P. Salmon, Denis S. Smirnov,
J. Vincent Filoteo
Chapter 29: Vascular neurocognitive disorders - Esther van den
Berg, Roy P.C. Kessels
Chapter 30: Neurocognition in HIV Patients: Evidence from CANTAB
Battery - Amy R. Bland, Rebecca Elliott, Barbara J. Sahakian
Chapter 31: Creutzfeldt-Jakob and prion diseases - Carlton S. Gass,
Ashok K. Verma
Part 5: Traumatic Brain Injury
Chapter 32: Moderate and Severe Traumatic Brain Injury - Alexander
Olsen, Andrew P. Cwiek, Emily L. Dennis, Frank G. Hillary
Chapter 33: Post-concussion Syndrome - Molly J. Sullan, Aliyah
Snyder
Chapter 34: Chronic traumatic Encephalopathy - Bennet I. Omalu,
Jennifer L. Hammers
Part 6: Psychiatric Disorders
Chapter 35: Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD - Mark S.
Greenberg, Kristin W. Samuelson, Roger K. Pitman
Chapter 36: Sleep-wake disorders - Michelle Olaithe, Romola S.
Bucks, Maria Pushpanathan, Ivana Rosenzweig
Chapter 37: Alcohol-related disorders - Claudia Padula, Timothy C.
Durazzo, Dieter J. Meyerhoff
Chapter 38: Substance abuse, prescribed medications, and toxin
exposure - James J. Mahony, Liv E. Miller, Marc W. Haut
Chapter 39: Personality disorders - Anthony C. Ruocco, Elizabeth
Infante, Liam Wright
Chapter 40: Neuropsychological impairment in psychotic disorders -
Avi Reichenberg, Anthony S. David, Nina Zaks
Chapter 41: Neuropsychology and mental illness in youth - Stephen
J. Wood, Kelly A. Allott
Professor Boyle has spent over three decades undertaking
quantitative research in the field of psychometrics, as related to
the measurement of individual differences in
personality, intelligence, and motivation, as well as undertaking
studies within the fields of neuropsychology, clinical psychology,
and educational psychology. In more recent years, he has applied
his extensive research skills to studies within the broad fields of
medical/health psychology, and has undertaken many studies within
the
area of women′s health. Lately, he has focused his attention more
on research topics pertaining to men′s health. Yaakov Stern is the
Florence Irving Professor of Neuropsychology in the departments of
Neurology and Psychiatry, as well as the Taub Institute for the
Research on Alzheimer’s Disease and the Aging Brain and the
Gertrude H. Sergievsky Center, at Columbia University Vagelos
College of Physicians and Surgeons. He is chief of the
Cognitive Neuroscience Division of the Department of
Neurology. His research work focuses on cognition in normal
aging and diseases of aging, including exploring the neural
implementation of cognitive reserve, structural and functional
imaging of cognitive aging, and modeling the natural history of
Alzheimer’s disease.
Dan J. Stein is Professor and Chair of the Department of
Psychiatry at the University of Cape Town, and Director of the
South African Medical Research Council’s Unit on Risk and
Resilience in Mental Disorders. He is a clinician-scientist
whose work has long focused on anxiety and related disorders,
including obsessive-compulsive spectrum conditions and
posttraumatic stress disorder. He has influenced the field by
extensive collaboration, mentorship, and publication. Barbara J
Sahakian is Professor of Clinical Neuropsychology at the University
of Cambridge Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural and Clinical
Neuroscience Institute. She is also an Honorary Clinical
Psychologist at Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge. She holds a PhD
and a DSc from the University of Cambridge. She is a Fellow of the
Academy of Medical Sciences and was President of the International
Neuroethics Society (2014-2016) and the British Association for
Psychopharmacology (2012-2014). In 2016, she was recipient of the
Robert Sommer Award and the International College of
Neuropsychopharmacology (CINP) Ethics Prize. Sahakian is also a
Member of the International Expert Jury for the 2017 Else
Kröner-Fresenius-Stiftung Prize dedicated to the biological basis
of psychiatric disorders. She is co-author of ‘Bad Moves: How
decision making goes wrong and the ethics of smart drugs’ (Oxford
University Press, 2013) and of ‘Sex, Lies and Brain Scans. How fMRI
reveals what really goes on in our minds’ (OUP, 2017). She is
co-editor of The Oxford Handbook of Neuroethics (OUP, 2011) and
Translational Neuropsychopharmacology (Current Topics in Behavioral
Neurosciences) (Springer International Publishing, 2016).
Sahakian has an international reputation in the fields of
psychopharmacology, neuropsychology, neuropsychiatry, neuroimaging
and neuroethics. She is perhaps best known for her work on ‘hot’
and ‘cold’ cognitive deficits in depression and early detection and
early treatment with cholinesterase inhibitors in Alzheimer’s
disease. She has over 400 publications in high impact scientific
journals. Sahakian co-invented the neuropsychological CANTAB tests.
Sahakian has contributed to Neuroscience and Mental Health
Government Policy and has spoken on resilience, brain health,
neuroscience and mental health at the World Economic Forum, Davos,
2014. She is a member of the World Economic Forum Global Agenda
Council on Brain Research.
Charles J. Golden is nationally and internationally known
for his clinical research in neuropsychological
assessment. He has given over 1000 presentations,
posters, and workshops, and published over 500 articles, book
chapters, and books. He is a Fellow of the American
Psychological Association, and holds a Diplomate in Clinical
Psychology, Clinical Neuropsychology, and Psychological
Assessment. He received the Distinguished
Neuropsychologist Award from the National Association of
Neuropsychologists in 2003. He is the editor of Archives of
Assessment Psychology and a past president of the National Academy
of Neuropsychologists. He is a Professor of Psychology at
Nova Southeastern University.
Tatia Mei-Chun Lee is the Chair Professor of Psychological Science
and Clinical Psychology and May Endowed Professor of
Neuropsychology at The University of Hong Kong. She is also the
Director of the State Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive
Sciences and Laboratory of Neuropsychology and Human Neuroscience
at the university. Her research focuses on the neuroplastic and
neuropsychological underpinnings of brain and psychological health.
She is an elected Fellow of learned societies, including the
Academy of Social Sciences in the United Kingdom, the American
Psychological Association (Society of Clinical Psychology and
Society of Clinical Neuropsychology), and the Association for
Psychological Science (Clinical Psychology).
Annabel Chen Shen-Hsing is a Professor of Psychology and Director
of Centre for Research and Development in Learning (CRADLE) at
Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore. She is a
clinical neuropsychologist educated in the United States (Purdue
University, West Virginia University, Medical College of Wisconsin)
and conducted post-doctoral research in neuroimaging at the Lucas
Centre, Stanford University School of Medicine. Her research seeks
to understand disturbance in brain and behaviour using
neuropsychological and neuroimaging techniques focusing on
cerebellar contributions to higher cognition, optimizing cognition
in aging neuroscience (active aging), and the science of learning
to translate neuroscience for education.
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |