Background
Goodglass was born in New York City August 18, 1920, graduated from Townsend Harris High School in 1935, and received a Bachelor of Arts degree from City College of New York in 1939.
(This is a comprehensive, interpretive account of aphasia ...)
This is a comprehensive, interpretive account of aphasia written to appeal to a broad audience. It combines historical, anatomic, and psychological approaches toward understanding the nature of aphasia. Included is a discussion of the brain-language relationship, the symptoms and syndromes common to aphasia, and alternative approaches to classification. It integrates phenomenology of aphasic symptoms with the anatomy of language and current theories of brain-language relations. It traces history of aphasic theory, from pre-Broca to contemporary theory. It provides detailed review of manifestations of aphasia in every language modality. It contains critical analysis of neurolinguistic inter-relations.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B004JBWN24/?tag=2022091-20
(This volume is one in a series of monographs being issued...)
This volume is one in a series of monographs being issued under the general title of "Disorders of Human Communication". Each monograph deals in detail with a particular aspect of vocal communication and its disorders, and is written by internationally distinguished experts. Therefore, the series will provide an authoritative source of up-to-date scientific and clinical informa tion relating to the whole field of normal and abnormal speech communication, and as such will succeed the earlier monumental work "Handbuch der Stimm und Sprachheilkunde" by R. Luchsinger and G. E. Arnold (last issued in 1970). This series will prove invaluable for clinicians, teachers and research workers in phoniatrics and logopaedics, phonetics and linguistics, speech pathology, otolaryngology, neurology and neurosurgery, psychology and psychiatry, paediatrics and audiology. Several of the monographs will also be useful to voice and singing teachers, and to their pupils. G. E. Arnold, Jackson, Miss. F. Winckel, Berlin B. D. Wyke, London Preface Neurologists, neuropsychologists, speech pathologists and other clinicians who care for dysphasic patients have often complained that available books on dysphasia tend to be parochially theoretical, and insufficiently directed towards clinical reality. These books provide the categories, labels, and theoretical speculations of one school or another; but dysphasic patients as often as not do not fit neatly into a specific theoretical category. Clinical patterns of dysphasic syndromes of most patients with dysphasia rarely conform fully to the pictures painted in the textbooks.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/3211816178/?tag=2022091-20
(This is a comprehensive, interpretive account of aphasia ...)
This is a comprehensive, interpretive account of aphasia written to appeal to a broad audience. It combines historical, anatomic, and psychological approaches toward understanding the nature of aphasia. Included is a discussion of the brain-language relationship, the symptoms and syndromes common to aphasia, and alternative approaches to classification. • Integrates phenomenology of aphasic symptoms with the anatomy of language and current theories of brain-language relations • Traces history of aphasic theory, from pre-Broca to contemporary theory • Provides detailed review of manifestations of aphasia in every language modality • Contains critical analysis of neurolinguistic inter-relations
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0122900405/?tag=2022091-20
psychologist neurology educator
Goodglass was born in New York City August 18, 1920, graduated from Townsend Harris High School in 1935, and received a Bachelor of Arts degree from City College of New York in 1939.
He then attended New York University, receiving a Master of Arts degree in psychology in 1948, and he received a Doctor of Philosophy degree in clinical psychology from the University of Cincinnati in 1951.
The Boston Virginia Hospital, where he spent many years investigating brain function, now houses the Harold Goodglass Aphasia Research Center. He served in the Army Air Force from 1942 to 1946, and was discharged as a Captain. Goodglass developed a special interest in aphasia early in his career, and with the research support of the Department of Veterans Affairs (Virginia) and the National Institutes of Health (National Institutes of Health), he published research articles on disorders of naming in aphasia, on category specific disorders of lexical comprehension and production, on the comprehension of syntax, and on the syndrome of agrammatism.
He also carried out a program of studies on cerebral dominance.
Among his collaborators were Fred Quadfasel, Jean Berko Gleason, Edith Kaplan, Martin Albert, Nancy Helm-Estabrooks, Marlene Oscar Berman, Sheila Blumstein, Nelson Butters, Norman Geschwind, Howard Gardner, Edgar Zurif, Joan Borod, Arthur Wingfield, and Kim Lindfield. Goodglass became director of the Boston University Aphasia Research Center in 1969, which is located at the Virginia Medical Center in Jamaica Plain, He remained in that post until 1996, and the Center was renamed in his honor, the "Harold Goodglass Aphasia Research Center." He was the author of over 130 research articles, and of the books Psycholinguistics and Aphasia (with Sheila Blumstein), The Assessment of Aphasia and Related Disorders, the Boston Diagnostic Aphasia Examination (with Edith Kaplan), Understanding Aphasia, and Anomia (with Arthur Wingfield).
He had recently been awarded a five-year grant from National Institutes of Health to continue his studies of aphasia. Goodglass died on March 18, 2002, of complications of a fall.
He was 82.
(This volume is one in a series of monographs being issued...)
(This is a comprehensive, interpretive account of aphasia ...)
(This is a comprehensive, interpretive account of aphasia ...)
(Book by Goodglass, Professor Harold)
Captain United States Army, 1942-1946, European Theatre of Operations. Fellow American Psychological Association. Member Academy Aphasia (past board directors), International Neuropsychol.
Society (past president), World Federation Neurology, Research Grp. on Aphasia (past secretary), Phi Beta Kappa.
Married Zelda Levine, June 3, 1945 (deceased August 1981). Children: Carolyn, Lawrence. Married Helen Story Haines Denison, July 16, 1983.