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Experiences and Perspectives of People with Aphasia who Engage in Disability ActivismAdams, Theresa 28 May 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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Exploring the Perceptions of Malaysian Speech-Language Pathologists regarding the Needs, Challenges, and Opportunities for Applying the Life Participation Approach to AphasiaHassan, Fatimah Hani B. 20 September 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Communication partner training to increase life participation for people with aphasiaCox, Kaitlin 27 August 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Quantification of Group Dynamics in Conversation Treatment for AphasiaSharkey, Caitlin A 04 1900 (has links)
Introduction: Conversation treatment for individuals with aphasia (IwAs) aims to enhance language and communication skills within naturalistic settings. Group dynamics, including psychosocial support (PSS) and vicarious learning (VL), are important components of this treatment. However, the lack of established aphasia-friendly methods for quantifying group dynamics impedes understanding of its contribution to treatment efficacy. This study addresses three key research goals: (1) Can group dynamics be reliably quantified? (2) Do measures of group dynamics vary with group size or time? (3) Are group dynamics linked to changes in self-reported psychosocial health measures?
Methods: IwAs were assigned to participate in either a large group or dyadic condition as part of a larger study. Participants completed multiple standardized assessments before and after receiving conversation treatment for one hour twice a week for ten weeks. A coding system was developed to track PSS and VL during sessions. Video recordings of sessions at the start (Session 2) and end (Session 19) of the treatment period were analyzed for five large groups and six dyads, with seven additional dyads coded for Session 19 after reliability was confirmed. Intrarater and interrater reliability were assessed by recoding 21% of the videos randomly.
Results: To address the first research goal, group dynamics were defined and then a code was created to represent occurrences of PSS and VL. After establishing a reliable coding system, instances of PSS and VL were compared across size conditions to address the second research goal. The results suggested that PSS differed between conditions later in treatment, but VL did not. For research goal three, the data suggest that large groups experience larger gains in quality of life measures, possibly due to increased exposure to PSS.
Conclusion: Findings indicate that group dynamics can be reliably tracked and used for quantitative analysis. PSS was more common in groups than dyads later in the 10 week treatment period, but VL did not vary across conditions or at the start or end of treatment. Further, there is some evidence that PSS in larger groups contributes to improvements in quality of life measures. / Communication Sciences
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JOINT DECISION-MAKING IN MARRIED COUPLES AFFECTED BY APHASIAHusak, Ryan S. 01 January 2018 (has links)
Background: Aphasia is an acquired language disorder, usually due to stroke, that affects the social functioning and the quality of life of the person with aphasia as well as the quality of life of his or her family and caregivers. Traditional aphasia therapy has tended to focus on decontextualized tasks and discrete elements of language functioning. The Life Participation Approach to Aphasia (LPAA) focuses on the collaborative nature of communication and addresses communication within personally relevant contexts. Joint decision-making is one type of social interaction that occurs frequently between married couples and has received considerable attention in the literature. To date, no study has investigated how married couples affected by aphasia collaboratively make decisions.
Aim: The present study aims to provide foundational information on joint decision-making by married couples affected by aphasia.
Methods and Procedures: Fourteen married couples in which one of the spouses had aphasia volunteered to participate in the study. A variety of assessment measures were administered to the participants with aphasia to characterize their speech and language deficits and all participants were administered a non-verbal reasoning test and a marital quality scale. The primary task of interest in this study involved a joint decision-making activity in which spouses were read two hypothetical ‘survival-type’ scenarios and were given a list of items for each scenario. The spouses were instructed to decide on six items and then rank their selected items in order of importance in terms of their value in helping them survive the scenarios. Participants’ interactions were audio- and video-recorded, and their verbal communication transcribed verbatim. The participants’ communicative interactions were coded for speech functions and analyzed by comparing differences in communication behaviors between the spouses with and without aphasia.
Results: Findings showed that participants with and without aphasia utilized a variety of speech functions but that the participants with aphasia made far fewer attempts to persuade their spouse to agree with them and that the spouses without aphasia tended to dominate the interaction, resulting in an imbalance of power in the decision-making process. Despite the differences in communication behaviors, both groups of spouses were supportive of the ideas suggested by their significant other and conflicts were typically resolved quickly.
Conclusion: Findings from this study revealed potential discrepancies in the balance of power between the spouses with and without aphasia in decision-making communication. Suggestions are provided for tailoring interventions and guiding future research in joint decision-making in couples affected by aphasia.
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Outcomes of a Life Participation Approach to Aphasia Treatment in Persons with Aphasia: The correlation between dose and confidenceFair, Jenny L. 11 December 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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Effectiveness of communication partner training program for employees working with persons with aphasiaBerry, Caitlin Ann 15 August 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Die aard van kommunikasie in ontwikkelingsprojekte van die Studente-JOOL-Gemeenskapsdiens (NWU-PUKKE) / Carla Martina Visser.Visser, Carla Martina January 2012 (has links)
The Student RAG Community Service (SRCS), a unique non-governmental organisation (NGO) of the Potchefstroom Campus of the North-West University, aims to support and to enable other NGOs to function independently. For this reason, the communication between the SRCS and these NGOs is viewed from the sub discipline of development communication, with the participative approach currently being perceived as the normative approach to communication for development.
Communication between the SRCS and representatives of the NGOs should therefore conform to the principles of the participative approach to development communication to contribute to empowerment and development. The principles of the participative approach that was identified as relevant to this study are participation, dialogue, cultural sensitivity, to enable the community to be self-reliant and community development.
This study is qualitative in nature and the research methods used to gather information about the nature of communication between the SRCS and the representatives of the projects are qualitative content analysis, partially structured interviews and observer–participant reporting.
Although this study has focused only on early child development projects, the nature of these projects and their communication varied to a large extent. The overall conclusion of this study is that there are gaps in the participative communication between the SRCS and the representatives of all the researched projects. The type of communication between the SRCS and early childhood development projects did not conform to the principles of cultural sensitivity, community development and the enablement of the community to be self-reliant. These gaps are attributed in part to the present documentation of the SRCS (2010 annual report, portfolio descriptions, transfer reports and minutes of 2010’s and 2011’s meetings) as well as the fact that this NGO’s training guidelines do not emphasise the importance of participatory principles, and do not offer sufficient training in the implementation of these principles to its various members.
Although the results indicate that the communication between the SRCS and the representatives of the projects presently does not conform to the principles of participative communication, the organisation is committed to addressing these gaps in future. / Thesis (MA (Communication Studies))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2013.
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Die aard van kommunikasie in ontwikkelingsprojekte van die Studente-JOOL-Gemeenskapsdiens (NWU-PUKKE) / Carla Martina Visser.Visser, Carla Martina January 2012 (has links)
The Student RAG Community Service (SRCS), a unique non-governmental organisation (NGO) of the Potchefstroom Campus of the North-West University, aims to support and to enable other NGOs to function independently. For this reason, the communication between the SRCS and these NGOs is viewed from the sub discipline of development communication, with the participative approach currently being perceived as the normative approach to communication for development.
Communication between the SRCS and representatives of the NGOs should therefore conform to the principles of the participative approach to development communication to contribute to empowerment and development. The principles of the participative approach that was identified as relevant to this study are participation, dialogue, cultural sensitivity, to enable the community to be self-reliant and community development.
This study is qualitative in nature and the research methods used to gather information about the nature of communication between the SRCS and the representatives of the projects are qualitative content analysis, partially structured interviews and observer–participant reporting.
Although this study has focused only on early child development projects, the nature of these projects and their communication varied to a large extent. The overall conclusion of this study is that there are gaps in the participative communication between the SRCS and the representatives of all the researched projects. The type of communication between the SRCS and early childhood development projects did not conform to the principles of cultural sensitivity, community development and the enablement of the community to be self-reliant. These gaps are attributed in part to the present documentation of the SRCS (2010 annual report, portfolio descriptions, transfer reports and minutes of 2010’s and 2011’s meetings) as well as the fact that this NGO’s training guidelines do not emphasise the importance of participatory principles, and do not offer sufficient training in the implementation of these principles to its various members.
Although the results indicate that the communication between the SRCS and the representatives of the projects presently does not conform to the principles of participative communication, the organisation is committed to addressing these gaps in future. / Thesis (MA (Communication Studies))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2013.
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