APA Handbook of Neuropsychology Volume 1: Neurobehavioral Disorders and Conditions: Accepted Science and Open Questions Volume 2: Neuroscience and Neuromethods

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Pub. Date: 2023-03-28
Publisher(s): American Psychological Association
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Summary

A comprehensive two-volume set, the APA Handbook of Neuropsychology provides foundational information on neuropsychology, identifies pressing research questions related to neuropsychological disorders and conditions, offers updates on methods to investigate these issues, and aims to shape the field’s future development.

Volume 1, Neurobehavioral Disorders and Conditions: Accepted Science and Open Questions, aids clinicians and researchers in updating their understanding of disordered brain function and addresses questions regarding neurobehavioral disorders, such as amnesia, and clinical conditions, such as Alzheimer’s disease. Taking a lifespan approach, chapters in Volume 1 include a section on accepted neuropsychological science and a section on important issues for future research.

Volume 2, Neuroscience and Neuromethods, focuses on neuroscience, brain imaging methods, and advanced statistical models needed to investigate the questions raised in Volume 1, as well as treatment paradigms to guide future interventions. Chapters aim to stimulate innovative assessment and intervention methods. 

The 73 chapters serve as an invaluable resource for the expanding field of neuropsychology. Clinicians, researchers, students, and scholars can use this handbook to gain a foundational understanding of neuropsychology and to further advance the field themselves. 

Author Biography

Gregory G. Brown, PhD, ABPP-CN, is emeritus professor, Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego School of Medicine. Dr. Brown earned a PhD in psychology from Wayne State University in 1977. He worked as a clinical neuropsychologist at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, Michigan for 17 years and at The New York Hospital/Cornell University Medical College for a year. In 1995, he joined the Department of Psychiatry at University of California, San Diego, and the Psychology Department at the VA San Diego Healthcare System. Throughout his career he has taught courses on clinical neuropsychology and mentored trainees. Dr. Brown has 170 papers listed in ResearchGate; his neuropsychological research has been wide-ranging, involving studies of the neuropsychological functioning of patients with neurological or neuromedical disorders and studies of these patients using functional and structural brain imaging. He has a board certification from the American Board of Professional Psychology with a specialty in clinical neuropsychology, and is a fellow of Division 40 of the American Psychological Association (Society for Clinical Neuropsychology).  He was the editor of the APA’s journal Neuropsychology from 2014 to 2019.

Bruce A. Crosson, PhD, ABPP-CN, has published more than 150 refereed journal articles during a career of over 40 years, and mentored 26 faculty, fellows, and graduate students. Most recently, Dr. Crosson’s primary faculty affiliations have included professor of clinical and health psychology at the University of Florida (1989–2012) and professor of neurology and of radiology and imaging sciences at Emory University (2012–2021). He held an honorary professorship in health and rehabilitation sciences at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia for 18 years (2004–2021). Dr. Crosson was the recipient of a Senior Research Career Scientist Award from the VA Rehabilitation Research and Development Service (2009-2021). He is considered one of the world’s leading experts on subcortical functions in language and is also recognized for his expertise in functional neuroimaging. Dr. Crosson has held a diplomate in clinical neuropsychology from the American Board of Professional Psychology since 1986, and he is a fellow of the American Psychological Association. He was one of the organizers of the 1997 Houston Conference on Specialty Education and Training in Clinical Neuropsychology, which has guided the training of clinical neuropsychologists for more than 20 years.

Kathleen (Kathy) Y. Haaland, PhD, ABPP-CN, is a tenured professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center. She is board certified by the American Board of Professional Psychology and the American Board of Clinical Neuropsychology (ABPP-CN) where she continues to participate in board certification exams. She has published more than 100 papers and chapters largely focused on the cognitive and neuroanatomical correlates of action in stroke, Parkinson’s disease, and Huntington’s disease.  Her research was continuously funded from 1981 to 2014, and in addition to serving as the director of neuropsychology at the New Mexico VA Healthcare System for many years, she was a VA research career scientist from 2004 to 2014.  She has been recognized locally for her research, is a fellow of the American Psychological Association, and received lifetime career contribution awards from the International Neuropsychological Society and the National Academy of Neuropsychology. She has also served in leadership roles in the International Neuropsychological Society, the APA, and the American Board of Clinical Neuropsychology. She was the symposium editor and then editor in chief of the Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society. Since 2017 she has been an associate editor for the neuroscience section of Frontiers for Young Minds.

Tricia Z. King, PhD, is a tenured professor in the Department of Psychology at Georgia State University (GSU). She is a fellow of Division 40 of the American Psychological Association (Society for Clinical Neuropsychology). Dr. King earned her PhD in clinical psychology with a neuropsychology specialization at the University of Florida. Dr. King continues to investigate the interacting biopsychosocial factors that contribute to optimal outcomes following neurodevelopmental disruption. The overarching goal of her work is to contribute to advancements in precision medicine, resulting in greater prognostic abilities and enhanced interventions to mitigate neurotoxicity and enable individuals to thrive. She has published more than 100 peer reviewed papers and chapters. Dr. King is committed to diversifying the trainee pipeline and has enjoyed mentoring and training at the undergraduate and graduate level. She sponsors a chapter of the Association of Students and Trainees at GSU (SCN ANST) and was awarded the GSU Outstanding Undergraduate Mentoring Award. She has served as the chair of the SCN Scientific Advisory Board, member of the SCN Fellows Committee, and was elected Treasurer of SCN. Dr. King serves on the editorial board for Child Neuropsychology and is an associate editor of The Clinical Neuropsychologist

 

Table of Contents

Volume 1. Neurobehavioral Disorders and Conditions: Accepted Science and Open Questions  

Contents  

Editorial Board 

About the Editors 

Contributors 

A Note from the Publisher 

Introduction 

Chapter 1. Clinical Neuropsychology: Foundational History and Future Prospects 

Gregory G. Brown and Kenneth M. Adams 

Part I. Neurobehavioral Disorders 

Chapter 2. Word Finding and Lexical Semantic Disorders 

Anastasia M. Raymer 

Chapter 3. Discourse and Communicative Pragmatics 

Seana Coulson, Jacob Momsen, and Crystal R. Poole 

Chapter 4. The Neuropsychology of Mathematical Cognition 

Konstantinos Priftis 

Chapter 5. Specific Reading Disabilities 

Jeremy Miciak and Jack M. Fletcher 

Chapter 6. Body Representation Disorders 

Liana Palermo and Antonella Di Vita 

Chapter 7. Higher Order Visual Disorders 

Ransom W. Campbell and Daniel Tranel 

Chapter 8. Syndromes of Limb Apraxia: Developmental and Acquired Disorders of Skilled Movements 

Jennifer Randerath 

Chapter 9. Disorders of Executive Functioning 

Yana Suchy 

Chapter 10. Memory Disorders 

Mieke Verfaellie and Margaret M. Keane 

Part II. Clinical Conditions 

Chapter 11. Spina Bifida and Other Neural Tube Defects 

Victoria J. Williams, Amery Treble-Barna, Ashley L. Ware, and Jack M. Fletcher 

Chapter 12. Very Preterm Birth 

Alice C. Burnett 

Chapter 13. Cerebral Palsy 

Seth Warschausky 

Chapter 14. Pediatric Brain Tumors 

Michelle E. Fox and Tricia Z. King 

Chapter 15. Neuropsychological Outcomes in Phenylketonuria 

Cristina Romani, Lucie Thomas, and Stephan Huijbregts 

Chapter 16. Neuropsychology of ADHD 

Erik G. Willcutt 

Chapter 17. Epilepsy and Neuropsychology  

Bruce P. Hermann, David W. Loring, Stephen C. Bowden, and Rani Sarkis 

Chapter 18. Traumatic Brain Injury 

Andrew R. Mayer, Lindsay D. Nelson, and Erin D. Bigler 

Chapter 19. Leukemia and Sickle Cell Disease 

Kristina K. Hardy, Christina M. Sharkey, Hannah Weisman, and Steven Hardy 

Chapter 20. Vascular Disease including Vascular Dementia 

Daniel A. Nation 

Chapter 21. Infectious Disorders: HIV, Hepatitis C, and COVID-19 Pandemics 

Mariana Cherner, Rowan Saloner, Erin Sundermann, and David Moore 

Chapter 22. Frontotemporal Dementia 

Molly Memel, Joel H. Kramer, and Doris Chen  

Chapter 23. Alzheimer’s Disease 

Katherine J. Bangen, Lisa V. Graves, Emily C. Edmonds, Kelsey R. Thomas, and Mark W. Bondi 

Chapter 24. Parkinson’s Disease and Parkinsonism: What the Field Knows 

Alexander I. Tröster 

Chapter 25. Huntington's Disease Across the Lifespan 

Julie C. Stout 

Chapter 26. Multiple Sclerosis 

Michelle H. Chen, Ralph H. B. Benedict, and John DeLuca 

Chapter 27. Alcohol Drinking and Alcohol Use Disorder Across the Ages: Dynamic Effects on the Brain and Function 

Edith V. Sullivan, Séverine Lannoy, Anne-Pascale Le Berre, Rosemary Fama, and Adolf Pfefferbaum 

Chapter 28. Neurocognitive Correlates of Psychostimulant Use 

Gill Bedi, Candice Basterfield, Alex A. Guerin, Eddie Mullen, Robert Hester, and Stephen C. Bowden  

Chapter 29. Marijuana 

Natania A. Crane and Natasha E. Wade 

Chapter 30. Prenatal Exposure to Opioids 

Egil Nygaard and Jannike Mørch Andersen 

Chapter 31. Environmental Toxicities Including Lead 

Roberta F. White and Aaron S. Reuben 

Chapter 32. Sleep and Circadian Rhythm Disorders 

Sean P. A. Drummond, Melinda L. Jackson, and Jade M. Murray 

Chapter 33. Autism Spectrum Disorder 

Rebecca P. Thomas, Kirsty L. Coulter, and Deborah A. Fein 

Chapter 34. Schizophrenia 

Amy M. Jimenez and Michael F. Greene 

Chapter 35. The Neuropsychology of Mood Disorders 

Federica Klaus and Lisa T. Eyler 

Chapter 36. The Neuropsychology of Anxiety: An Approach-Avoidance Decision-Making Framework 

Robin L. Aupperle, Timothy J. McDermott, Evan White, and Namik Kirlic 

Chapter 37. Eating Disorders: Anorexia Nervosa, Bulimia Nervosa, and Binge Eating Disorder 

Christina E. Wierenga 

Index 

 


Volume 2. Neuroscience and Neuromethods  

Contents  

Editorial Board  

Contributors 

Part I. Neuroscience 

Chapter 1. Brain Organization: From Cells and Circuits to Systems and Networks 

Alex Fornito 

Chapter 2. Brain Development  

Clare  E. Palmer and Terry L. Jernigan 

Chapter 3. Behavior Genetics in Neuropsychology 

William S. Kremen, Eero Vuoksimaa, and Chandra A. Reynolds 

Chapter 4. Learning and Memory 

Alexander J. Barnett and Charan Ranganath 

Chapter 5. Movement 

Brian P. Johnson and Leonardo G. Cohen 

Chapter 6. Higher-Order Visual Object Representations: A Functional Analysis of Their Role in Perception and Action 

Bradford Z. Mahon 

Chapter 7. The Neuroscience of Language and Aphasia 

Nina F. Dronkers and Maria V. Ivanova  

Chapter 8. Neuroscience of Executive Functioning 

Yana Suchy 

Chapter 9. Social Neuroscience 

Marie-Pier B. Tremblay, Carola Tuerk, Philip L. Jackson, and Miriam H. Beauchamp  

Part II. Assessment: Emerging Methods 

Chapter 10. Centering Social Forces and Cultural Experiences in Neuropsychological Assessment 

Miguel Arce Rentería, Justina F. Avila, Jet M. J. Vonk, and Jennifer J. Manly 

Chapter 11. Automated Neuropsychological Testing 

Russell M. Bauer and Robert M. Bilder 

Chapter 12. Wearable and Digital Technology Tools: Neuropsychological Assessment, Monitoring and Diagnosis in the Digital Era 

Rhoda Au, Honghuang Lin, Kieffer Christianson, and Daniela Brunner 

Chapter 13. Assessing and Predicting Everyday Function 

Tania Giovannetti, Katherine Hackett, Molly B. Tassoni, Rachel Mis, and Stephanie M. Simone 

Chapter 14. Evaluating social cognition 

Skye McDonald and Michelle Kelly 

Chapter 15. Videoconference Teleneuropsychology 

Travis H. Turner and Timothy W. Brearly 

Part III. Interventions 

Chapter 16. Rehabilitation of Neuropsychological Deficits: The Role of Restorative Approaches  

Thomas F. Bergquist, Molly J. Sullan, and Eva C. Alden  

Chapter 17. Rehabilitation of Neuropsychological Deficits: Compensatory Approaches 

Alyssa Weakley and Sarah Tomaszewski Farias 

Chapter 18. Pediatric Rehabilitation 

Shari L. Wade, Lisa M. Gies, Anna R. Adlam, Alessandra Bardoni, Claudia Corti, Kelly M. Jones, Jennifer Limond, and Tricia Williams 

Chapter 19. Aphasia Treatment: Lessons for Clinically Oriented Neuroscientists  

Bruce A. Crosson 

Chapter 20. Interventions for Psychosocial and Emotional Sequelae of Brain Injury and Disease 

Skye McDonald, Tamara Ownsworth, and Dana Wong 

Chapter 21. From Virtual Reality to Augmentative Apps: The Future of Cognitive Rehabilitation Therapeutics 

Anthony Y. Stringer and Anastacia Nichols 

Chapter 22. Non-Invasive Brain Stimulation as a Rehabilitation Tool for Cognitive Impairment: Current Evidence, Clinical Implications, and Future Directions 

Benjamin M. Hampstead, Ketrin Lengu, Elana R. Goldenkoff, and Michael Vesia 

Chapter 23. Clinical Virtual Reality: The State of the Science 

Albert Rizzo, Sebastian Koenig, Belinda Lange 

Chapter 24. Life Style Interventions 

Joe R. Nocera, Keith M. McGregor, and Monica C. Serra 

Chapter 25. Implementation Science 

Christopher J. Miller and Julianne E. Brady 

Part IV. Neuroimaging Methods: Tutorial Presentations 

Chapter 26. Structural MRI  

Amanda Bischoff-Grethe and Christine Fennema-Notestine 

Chapter 27. Functional and Physiological Magnetic Resonance Imaging 

Frank Haist, Divya S. Bolar, and Richard B. Buxton 

Chapter 28. Diffusion Imaging and Fiber Mapping  

Erin D. Bigler and Naomi J. Goodrich-Hunsaker 

Chapter 29. Electroencephalography in Infants and Children 

Michelle Downes, Joe Bathelt, and Wanze Xie  

Chapter 30. Magnetoencephalography 

Carly Demopoulos 

Chapter 31. PET Neuroimaging of Neurologic Disease: Methods, Clinical and Research Applications 

Keenan A. Walker and Murat Bilgel 

Part V. Statistical and Probabilistic Models for Neuropsychologists 

Chapter 32. Formal Models of Cognition and Behavior 

Gregory G. Brown 

Chapter 33. Advances in Psychometric Theory: Item Response Theory, Generalizability Theory, and Cognitive Psychometrics 

Michael L. Thomas and John R. Duffy 

Chapter 34. Structural Equation Modeling in Neuropsychology Research 

Rex B. Kline 

Chapter 35. Multilevel Modeling in Neuropsychological Research 

Ronald H. Heck and Tingting Reid 

Chapter 36. Machine Learning 

Daoqiang Zhang, Mingxia Liu, Wei Shao, Jiashuang Huang, Mingliang Wang, Liang Sun, and Meiling Wang 

Index 

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