Clinical Neuropsychology

Northwestern University Medical School

Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

 


The clinical neuropsychology track accepts one student each year in the clinical psychology doctoral program. In addition to the clinical training which is standard to the doctoral program, neuropsychology students are provided with additional curricular, clinical, and research opportunities described below.

Primary Goals of the Clinical Neuropsychology Track

  1. Provide a strong educational foundation in clinical neuropsychology through completed coursework in cognitive neuroscience, neuroanatomy, and neurobiology.

  2. Provide extensive clinical experience in neuropsychological assessment and intervention, with exposure to a wide variety of neurobehavioral disorders in both the inpatient and outpatient settings.

  3. Promote a strong emphasis on research with the intent of training students to become independent investigators.

Research Resources

(website: http://www.brain.northwestern.edu)

Clinical Resources

Curriculum for Clinical Neuropsychology Track

First Year

Classes

·         +Psychological Assessment I, II, III (1447-402, 403, 404)

·         +Personality/Psychotherapy Sequence (1447-420, 416, 441)

·         +Research Methods I, II, III (1447-426, 427, 428)

·         +*Brain and Behavior: Introduction to Clinical Neuropsychology (1447-472)

·         +Advanced Research Methodology (1447-429)

Clinical Practicum

·         +Observational Practicum (6 months/2 hours/week)

Research

·         +Selection of Second-Year Project

Second Year

Classes

·         *Neuropsychological Assessment (1447-475)

·         *Advanced Neuroanatomy (Neuroscience Institute) (440)

·         *Neurobiology of Disease (Neuroscience Institute) (433)

·         +Neuropsychological Analysis and Inference (1447-498)

·         +Social Psychology (1447-413)

·         +Cognitive Psychology (1447-412)

·         +MHSP&P I, II, III (1447-498)

Clinical Practicum

·         +Clinical Practicum (15 hours per week) (1447-523)

o        6 months Psychological Assessment

o        6 months Outpatient Neuropsychology

Research

·         + Second Year Project Due End of Spring Quarter

Third Year

Classes

·         Various electives from the Neuroscience Institute, the Department of Psychology, and the School of Speech as well as the Division of Clinical Psychology are available:

Interdepartmental Biological Sciences Program

·         Fundamentals of Neurobiology

·         Neurobiology of Learning and Memory

·         Neurobiology of Biological Clocks

·         Biological Basis of Disease

·         Alzheimer's Disease

Neuroscience Institute

·         Fundamentals of Neuroscience

·         Neural Plasticity

·         Cellular and Molecular Basis of Information Storage

·         Neural Control of Movement

Psychology (Within the College of Arts & Sciences, Evanston Campus)

·         Neurobiology and Behavior I & II

·         Neuroscience and Behavior Laboratory

·         Human Learning and Memory

·         Brain Damage and the Mind

·         Perception

·         Behavioral and Neural Bases of Visual Perception

Communication Sciences and Disorders

·         The Brain and Cognition

·         Development and Disorders of Memory

·         Functional Neuroanatomy

·         Research (1447-590 - Toward Comprehensive Paper)

Clinical Practicum

·         Clinical Practicum (15 hours per week) (1447-523)

o        6 months NMH Neuropsychological Consultation Service

o        6 months Neurobehavior and Memory Health Service

Research

·         Comprehensive Paper Proposal Due November 15

·         Comprehensive Paper Defense: June 15

Fourth Year

Classes

·         Post-Candidacy Research (1447-599) - Three Quarters Required

Clinical Practicum

·         Optional

Research

·         Completion of Dissertation Research

Fifth Year

Clinical Internship at APA-Accredited Site (1447-503)

Completion of Dissertation

 


STAFF AND FACULTY

 

Program Director and Clinical Supervisor: Sandra Weintraub, PhD, ABCN/ABPP
Program Assistant Director and Clinical Supervisor: Robert Hanlon, PhD, ABCN/ABPP
Clinical Supervisor: Nancy Johnson, PhD


Adjunct Faculty: Mark Moulthrop, PhD (ABCN), Robert Heilbronner, PhD (ABCN); Marsel Mesulam, MD, Darren Gitelman, MD, (neurologists); Dana Small, PhD (cognitive neuroscience); Darby Morhardt, MSW (social worker)

Representative Publications from Faculty

WEINTRAUB

Kaplan E, Goodglass H, Weintraub S. The Boston Naming Test. Philadelphia, PA: Lea and Febiger; 1983, 2000.

Daffner KR, Ahern GHL, Weintraub S, Mesulam M-M. Dissocciated neglect behavior following sequential strokes in the right hemisphere. Ann Neurol 1990; 28:97-101.

Weintraub S, Rubin NP, Mesulam M-M. Primary progressive aphasia: Longitudinal course, neuropsychological profile and language features. Arch Neurol 1990; 47: 1329-1335.

Daffner KR, Scinto LFM, Weintraub S, Guinessey J, Mesulam M-M. Diminsished curiousity in patients with probable Alzheimer's disease as measured by exploratory eye movements. Neurology 1992; 42:320-328.

Kapust LR, Weintraub S. To drive or not to drive? Road testing in two patients with dementia of the Alzheimer's-type. J Geriatr Psychiatry Neurol 1992; 5:210-216.

Price BH, Gurvit H, Weintraub S, Geula C, Leimkuhler E, Mesulam M-M. Neuropsychological petterns and language deficits in twnenty consecutive cases of autopsy-confirmed Alzheimer's disease. Arch Neurol 1993; 50:931-937.

Weintraub S, Mesulam M-M. Four neuropsychological profiles in dementia. In: Boller F, Spinnler H, eds. Handbook of Neuropsychology, Volume 8. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Elsevier Science Publishers; 1993:pp. 253-282.

Daffner KR, Scinto LFM, Weintraub S, Guinessey J, Mesulam M-M. The impact of aging on curiousity as measured by exploratory eye movements. Arch Neurol 1994;51 (April): 368-376.

Scinto LFM, Daffner KR, Castro L, Weintraub S, Vavrik M, Mesulam M-M. Impairment of spatially directed attention in patients with probable Alzheimer's disease as measured by eye movements. Arch Neurol 1994; 51 (July): 682-688.

Scinto LFM, Daffner KR, Dressler D, Ransil BI, Rentz D, Weintraub S, Mesulam M, potter H: A potential non-invasive neurobiological test for Alzheimer's disease. Science, 266: 1051-1054, 1994.

Sandson TA, Manoach DS, Price BH, Rentz D, Weintraub S. "Right-hemisphere learning disability" associated with left hemisphere dysfunction. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 57: 1129-32, 1994.

Weintraub S, Powell DH, Whitla DK, Successful cognitive aging: individual differences among physicians on a computerized test of mental state. Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry. 1994;28:15-34.

Manoach DS, Sandson TA, Weintraub S: The developmental social-emotional processing disorder is associated with right hemisphere abnormnalities. Neuropsychiatry, Neuropsychology and Behavioral Neurology 8: (2), 99-105, 1995.

Manoach DS, O'Connor M, Weintraub S: Absence of neglect for mental representations during the intracarotid amobarbital procedure. Archives of Neurology 53; 333-336, April, 1996.

Weintraub S, Daffner KR, Ahern G, Price BH, Mesulam M-M: Right-sided hemispatial neglect and bilateral cerebral lesions. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 60: 342-344, 1996.

Thompson CK, Ballard KJ, Tait ME, Weintraub S, Mesulam M-M: Patterns of language decline in non-fluent primary progressive aphasia. Aphasiology 11 (4/5): 297-321, 1997.

Manoach DS, Weintraub S, Daffner KR, Scinto LFM,: Deficient antisaccades in the social-emotional processing disorder. NeuroReport 8 (4): 901-905, 1997.

Weintraub S, Peavy GM, O'Connor M, Johnson NA, Acar D, Sweeny J, Janssen I: Three Words Three Shapes (3W3S) Memory test for patients with dimentia. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology 22:267-78, 2000.

Rentz DM, Weintraub S: Neuropsychological detection of early probable Alzheimer's disease. In Scinto LFM, Daffner KR (Eds): Early diagnosis and treatment of Alzheimer's disease. Totowa, New Jersey: Humana Press, Inc., 2000.

Weintraub S. Neuropsychological assessment of mental state. In: Mesulam M-M, ed. Principles of Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology (2nd Edition). New York, Oxford University Press, pp. 121-173, 2000.

Rosler A, Mapstone MA, Hays AK, Mesulam M-M, Rademaker A, Gitelman DR, Weintraub S: Alterations of visual search strategy in Alzheimer’s disease and aging.  Neuropsychology, 2000, 14: 398-408.

Weintraub S. Cognitive Aging. In Adelman G, Smith B, eds, Encyclopedia of Neuroscience. New York, Elsevier Science Publishers, 2000.

LaBar KS, Mesulam M-M, Weintraub S: Emotional curiosity: Arousal modulation of visual exploration and its preservation in aging and early stage Alzheimer’s disease.  Neuropsychologia, 2000, 38: 1734-1740.

Mapstone ME, Rosler A, Hays A, Gitelman DR, Weintraub S: Dynamic allocation of attention during simulated driving in aging and Alzheimer’s disease: Uncoupling of the eye and the mind.  Archives of Neurology, 2001,  58: 1443-47.

 

1996-2006, JOURNAL PAPERS ONLY

Manoach D.S., O'Connor M, Weintraub S : Absence of neglect for mental representations during the intracarotid amobarbital procedure. Archives of Neurology , 53; 333-336, April, 1996.

Weintraub S, Daffner KR, Ahern G, Price BH, Mesulam M-M: Right-sided hemispatial neglect and bilateral cerebral lesions. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry, 60: 342-344, 1996.

Thompson CK, Ballard KJ, Tait ME, Weintraub S , Mesulam M-M: Patterns of language decline in non-fluent primary progressive aphasia. Aphasiology, 11 (4/5): 297-321, 1997.

Manoach DS, Weintraub S , Daffner KR, Scinto LFM: Deficient antisaccades in the social-emotional processing disorder. NeuroReport, 8 (4): 901-905, 1997.

Mesulam M-M, Johnson N, Grujic Z, Weintraub S : Apolipoprotein E genotypes in primary progressive aphasia. Neurology, 49:51-55, 1997.

Goldstein JM, Seidman LJ, Goodman JM, Koren D, Weintraub S, Tsuang MT : Are there sex differences in neuropsychological functions among patients with schizophrenia? American Journal of Psychiatry, 155: 1358-64, 1998.

Grujic, Z., Mapstone, M., Gitelman, D., Weintraub, S ., Johnson, N., Hays, A., Kwasnika, C., and Mesulam, M.-M..  Dopamine agonists reorient visual exploration away from the neglected hemispace.  Neurology, 51: 1395-98, 1998.

Weintraub S , Peavy GM, O'Connor M, Johnson NA, Acar D, Sweeny J, Janssen I: Three Words Three Shapes (3W3S) Memory test for patients with dementia. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 22: 267-78, 2000.

Rosler A, Mapstone MA, Hays AK, Mesulam M-M, Rademaker A, Gitelman DR, Weintraub S : Alterations of visual search strategy in Alzheimer's disease and aging. Neuropsychology, 2000, 14: 398-408.

LaBar KS , Mesulam M-M, Weintraub S : Emotional curiosity: Arousal modulation of visual exploration and its preservation in aging and early stage Alzheimer's disease. Neuropsychologia, 2000, 38: 1734-1740.

Mapstone ME, Rosler A, Hays A, Gitelman DR, Weintraub S : Dynamic allocation of attention during simulated driving in aging and Alzheimer's disease: Uncoupling of the eye and the mind. Archives of Neurology, 2001, 58: 1443-47.

Mesulam M-M, Weintraub S , Guillozet AL, Shaw PL , Mash DC , Bigio EH. AT8 and PHF-1 immunohistochemical staining patterns in brains of neuropsychologically normal elderly. Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology, 61:455, 2002.

Mapstone ME, Weintraub S , Gitelman DR , Mesulam M-M: Cerebral hemispheric specialization for spatial attention: spatial distribution of search-related eye fixations in the absence of neglect. Neuropsychologia, 2003; 41:1396-1409.

Sonty SP, Mesulam M-M, Thompson CK, Johnson NA, Weintraub S , Parrish TB, Gitelman DR : Anatomical and functional analysis of language network changes in primary progressive aphasia. Annals of Neurology, 2003; 53:35-49.

Guillozet AL, Weintraub S , Mash D, Mesulam M-M: Neurofibrillary tangles, amyloid plaques and memory impairment in aging and MCI. Archives of Neurology, 2003; 60: 729-736.

Sobrido MJ, Abu-Khalil A, Weintraub S, Johnson N, Quinn B, Cummings JL, Mesulam M-M, Geschwind DH: Possible association of the tau H1/H1 genotype with primary progressive aphasia. Neurology, 2003; 60:862-4.

Mesulam M-M, Grossman M, Hillis A, Weintraub S : The core and halo of primary progressive aphasia and semantic dementia. Annals of Neurology, 54 (supplement 5): S11-S14, 2003.

Hogg M, Grujic Z, Baker M, Demirci S, Guillozet A, Sweet AP, Herzog L, Weintraub S , Mesulam M-M, LaPointe NE, Gamblin TC, Berry RW, Binder LI, de Silva R, Lees A, Espinoza M, Davies P, Grover A, Sahara N, Ishizawa T, Dickson D, Yen S-H, Hutton M, Bigio EH: The L266V tauI mutation is associated with frontotemporal dementia nd Pick-like 3R and 4R tauopathy. Acta Neuropathologica (Berl), 2003; 106: 323-336.

Reber, PJ, Martinez LA , Weintraub S : Intact artificial grammar learning in Alzheimer's disease. Cognitive, Affective and Behavioral Neuroscience, 2003; 3: 145-153.

Salamon G, Salamon N, Johnson N, Mongkolwat P, Gitelman D, Weintraub S , Mesulam M, Russell E: L'exploration en IRM des démences de type Alzheimer. Que peut-on voir sur un examine de routine? Revue Neurologique, (Paris), 2004; 160: 63-73.

Mesulam M, Shaw P, Mash D, Weintraub S : Taupathy in the cholinergic nucleus basalis is an early event in the progression from aging to MCI and AD. Annals of Neurology , 2004; 55: 815–828.

Wicklund AKH, Johnson N, Weintraub S : Preservation of reasoning in primary progressive aphasia: further differentiation from Alzheimer's disease and frontal lobe dementia. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 26: 347-355, 2004.

Johnson N, Barion A, Rademaker A, Rehkemper G, Weintraub S : The Activities of Daily Living Questionnaire (ADLQ): a validation study in patients with dementia. Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders, 2004.

Vandenburghe RR, Vandenbulcke M, Weintraub S , Johnson N, Porke K, Thompson CK, Mesulam M-M: Paradoxical features of word finding difficulty in primary progressive aphasia. Annals of Neurology, 57:204–209, 2005.

Mesulam M, Weintraub S , Parrish T, Gitelman D: Primary progressive aphasia: Reversed asymmetry of atrophy and right hemisphere language dominance. Neurology, 64:556-7, 2005.

Rösler A, Hays AK, Mapstone ME, Gitelman DR, Weintraub S : Narrowing of the "zoom lens" of focal attention in Alzheimer's disease: Evidence from visual search. Cortex, 41:512-519, 2005.

Li X, Rowland LP, Bird T, Schellenberg G, Johnson N, Siddique T, Mesulam M-M, Weintraub, S , Mastrianni, JA: Prion protein codon 129 genotype prevalence is altered in primary progressive aphasia. Annals of Neurology, 58(6): 858-864 , 2005.

Westerberg CE, Paller, KA, Weintraub S , Mesulam, M-M, Holdstock JS, Mayes, A R, Reber, PJ (submitted). When memory does not fail: Familiarity-based recognition in Mild Cognitive Impairment and Alzheimer's Disease. Neuropsychology, 20: 193-205, 2006.

Schrauf RW, Weintraub S , Navarro E: Is adaptation of the Word Accentuation Test of Premorbid Intelligence (WAT) necessary for use among older, Spanish-speaking immigrants in the United States ? Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, 12, 391-399, 2006.

Wicklund, AH, Johnson N, Rademaker A, Weitner BB, Weintraub S . Word list versus story memory in Alzheimer's disease and frontotemporal dementia. Alzheimer's Disease and Associated Disorders , 20, 86-92, 2006.

Gass J, Cannon A, Mackenzie IR, Boeve B, Baker M, Adamson J, Crook R, Melquist S, Kuntz K, Petersen R, Josephs K, Brown S-P, Graff-Radford N, Uitti R, Dickson D, Wzsolek Z, Gonzalez J, Beach TG, Bigio E, Johnson N, Weintraub S , Mesulam M, White III CL, 8, Woodruff B, Caselli R, Hsiung GY, Feldman H, KnopmanD, Hutton M, Rademakers R: Mutations in progranulin are a major cause of ubiquitin-positive frontotemporal lobar degeneration. Human Molecular Genetics, 2006, online.

Benloucif S, Green K, L'Hermite-Balériaux M, Weintraub S , Wolfe LF, Zee PC: Responsiveness of the circadian clock to light. Neurobiology of Aging, in press.

Grudzien A, Shaw P, Weintraub S , Bigio E, Mash D, Mesulam, M-M: Locus coeruleus neurofibrillary degeneration in aging, mild cognitive impairment and early Alzheimer's disease. Neurobiology of Aging, in press.

Rogalski E, Rademaker F, Weintraub S : False recognition of incidentally learned words in primary progressive aphasia. Neuropsychologia , in press.

Weintraub S , Fahey C, Johnson N, Mesulam M-M, Gitelman DR, Weitner BB, Rademaker.. Vasectomy in Men with Primary Progressive Aphasia. Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology, in press.

Morris JC, Weintraub S , Chui H, Cummings J, DeCarli C, Ferris S, Foster NL, Galasko D, Graff-Radford N, Peskind ER 1 , Beekly D, Ramos E, Kukull WA: The Uniform Data Set (UDS): Clinical and cognitive variables and descriptive data from Alzheimer Disease Centers. Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders, in press.


JOHNSON

Papers

Johnson N, Petersik J: Preliminary findings suggesting cyclic changes in visual contrast sensitivity during menstrual cycle. Perceptual Motor Skills, 64, 587, 1987.

Mesulam MM, Johnson N, Grujic Z, Weintraub S: Apolipoprotein E Genotypes in Primary Progressive Aphasia, Neurology, 49, 51-55, 1997.

Grujic Z, Mapstone M, Gitelman D, Johnson N, Weintraub S, Hays A. Kwasnica C, Harvey R, Mesulam MM: Dopamine agonists reorient visual exploration away from the neglected hemispace. Neurology, 51, 1395-1397, 1998.

Weintraub S, Peavy GM, O'Connor M, Johnson N, Acar D, Guinessey J, Janssen I. Three Words-Three Shapes: A Clinical Test of Memory. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 22(2), 267-278, 2000.

Abstracts

Johnson N, Helmstetter F: Exposure to white noise results in decreased sensitivity to thermal stimuli in humans. Society for Neuroscience, 19, 965, 1993.

Johnson N, Helmstetter F: Conditional fear-induced hypoalgesia in humans using a non-noxious UCS. Socirty for Neuroscience, 20, 360, 1994.

Del Toro D, Goldbaum A, Johnson N, Park T: Pain perception during clinical nerve conduction studies. Society for Neuroscience, 21, 1762, 1995.

Weintraub S. Gitelman DR, Grujic Z,Farina AM, Johnson N, Meyer J, Janssen I, Harvey R, Mesulam MM: The effect of focal strokes on three behavioral components of spatial orientation. Neurology, 1997, 48 (Supplement), A376-77.

Johnson N, Mapstone M, Hays A, Weintraub S: Overt and Covert Shifts of Visual Spatial Attention in Alzheimer's Disease. Journal of the International Neuropscychological Society, 4(1), 56. 1998

Morhardt D, and Johnson N. Effects of memory loss support groups for persons with early stage dimentia. Gerontologist, 38(1), 297, 1998.

Gitelman DR, Nobre A, Sonty S, Thompson C, Johnson N, Weintraub S, Parrish T, Mesulam M-M: Phonological and semantic activations in primary progressive aphasia. Neuroimage 10, 2000.

 

HANLON

Hanlon, R.E., & Brown, J.W. (1989). Microgenesis: Historical review and current studies. In A. Ardila & F. Ostrosky-Solis (Eds.). Brain Organization of Language and Cognitive Processes, 3-15. New York : Plenum.

Hanlon, R.E., Brown, J.W., & Gerstman, L.J. (1990). Enhancement of naming in nonfluent aphasia through gesture. Brain and Language, 38, 298-314.

Hanlon, R.E. (1991). The role of neuromotor activation in the facilitation of language production: Rehabilitation applications. In R.E. Hanlon (Ed.). Cognitive Microgenesis: A Neuropsychological Perspective, 180-196. New York : Springer-Verlag.

Hanlon, R.E. (Ed.) (1991). Cognitive Microgenesis: A Neuropsychological Perspective. New York : Springer-Verlag.

Hanlon, R.E., Dobkin, B.H., Hadler, B., Ramirez, S., & Cheska, Y. (1992). Neurorehabilitation following right thalamic infarct: Effects of cognitive retraining on functional performance. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology,14, 354-368.

Dobkin, B.H., & Hanlon, R.E. (1993). Dopamine agonist treatment of anterograde amnesia from a mediobasal forebrain injury. Annals of Neurology, 33, 313-316.

Hanlon, R.E., Clontz, B., & Thomas, M. (1993). Management of severe behavioral dyscontrol following subarachnoid hemorrhage. Neuropsychological Rehabilitation, 3, 63-76.

Hanlon, R.E. (1994). Neuropsychological rehabilitation. In D. Zaidel (Ed.). Neuropsychology: Handbook of Perception and Cognition, 317-338. San Diego : Academic Press.

Hanlon, R.E., & Brown, J.W. (1994). Apraxia. In V.S. Ramachandran (Ed.). Encyclopedia of Human Behavior, 199-209. San Diego : Academic Press.

Hanlon, R.E., Clontz, B., Snow, D., & Thomas, M. (1995). Treatment of supplementary motor area syndrome. Journal of Neurologic Rehabilitation, 9, 197-204.

Hanlon, R.E., & Edmondson, J. (1996). Disconnected phonology: A linguistic analysis of phonemic jargon aphasia. Brain and Language, 55, 199-212.

Hanlon, R.E. (1996). Motor learning following unilateral stroke. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 77, 811-815.

Schnider, A., Hanlon, R.E., Alexander, D.N., & Benson, D.F. (1997). Ideomotor apraxia: Behavioral dimensions and neuroanatomical basis. Brain and Language, 58, 125-136.

Dromerick, A.W., Meschia, J.F., Kumar, A., & Hanlon, R.E. (1997). Bilateral simultaneous thalamic hemorrhages following administration of intravenous tissue plasminogen activator. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 78, 92-94.

Tucker, F.M., & Hanlon, R.E. (1998). Effects of mild traumatic brain injury on narrative discourse production. Brain Injury, 12, 783-792.

Hanlon, R.E., Mattson, D., Demery, J.A., & Dromerick, A.W. (1998). Axial movements are relatively preserved with respect to limb movements in aphasic patients. Cortex, 34, 731-741.

Hanlon, R.E., Lux, W.E., & Dromerick, A.W. (1999). Global aphasia without hemiparesis: Language profiles and lesion distribution. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry, 66, 365-369.

Hanlon, R.E., Demery, J.A., Martinovich Z., & Kelly, J.P. (1999). Effects of acute injury characteristics on neuropsychological status and vocational outcome following mild traumatic brain injury. Brain Injury, 13, 873-887.

Demery, J.A., Hanlon, R.E., & Bauer, R. (2001). Profound amnesia and confabulation following traumatic brain injury. Neurocase, 7, 295-302.

Demery, J.A., Pedraza, O., & Hanlon, R.E. (2002). Differential profiles of verbal learning in traumatic brain injury. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 24, 818-827.

Demery, J.A., Hanlon, R.E., & Bauer, R. (2003). Amnestic-confabulatory syndrome in traumatic brain injury. Dementia Review, 3, 8-9.

Hanlon, R.E., Demery, J.A., Kuczen, C., & Kelly, J.P. (2005). Effect of traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage on neuropsychological profiles and vocational outcome following moderate or severe traumatic brain injury. Brain Injury, ­19, 343-351.

Hanlon, R.E. (2005). Murder in Chicago : Insanity and tragedy. In R.L Heilbronner (Ed.) A Forensic Neuropsychology Casebook, 268-284. Guilford Publications: New York .

 

SMALL

D. M. Small, D.H Zald, M. Jones-Gotman, J. Pardo, R.J. Zatorre, S. Frey, M. Petrides. (1999), Human cortical gustatory areas: a review of functional neuroimaging data.  NeuroReport 10, 7-14.

D. M. Small, R. J. Zatorre, M. Jones-Gotman, M. Petrides, A. C. Evans, (1997), Flavour processing: more than the sum of its parts. NeuroReport 8, 3913-3917.

D. M. Small, M. Jones-Gotman, R. J. Zatorre, M. Petrides, A. C. Evans (1997) A role for the human right anterior temporal lobe in taste quality recognition. Journal of Neuroscience, 17(13) 5136-5142.

Small DM, Zatorre RJ, Jones-Gotman M, Petrides M, Evans AC: Flavor processing: More than the sum of its parts. NeuroReport 8, 3913-17, 1997.

Small DM, Jones-Gotman M, Zatorre RJ, , Petrides M, Evans AC: A role for the human right anterir temporal lobe in taste quality recognition. Journal of Neuroscience 17, 5136-42, 1997

Small DM, et al: Human cortical gustatory areas: A review of functional neuroimaging data. NeuroReport 10, 7-14, 1999.

D.M. Small, D.R. Gitelman, M. D. Gregory, A. C. Nobre, T. Parrish, M-M Mesulam The posterior cingulate cortex and visual spatial expectancy. Neuroimage, Vol 13 (3) 360 (2001).

D. M. Small, R. J. Zatorre, A. Dagher, M. Jones-Gotman, Brain activity related to eating chocolate: from pleasure to aversion. Brain, Vol 124 No.(, 1720-1733. (2001)

D. M. Small, R. J. Zatorre, M. Jones-Gotman. Inreased taste intensity perception following resection of the anterior temporal lobe in humans. Brain, Vol. 124, No. 8, 1566-1575 (2001)

D. M. Small, R.J. Zatorre, M. Jones-Gotman, Deficits in taste intensity estimation following resection of the anterior temporal lobe in humans. Chemical Senses, 26, 425-432. (2001)


MESULAM

Daffner, Mesulam, Scinto, Cohen, Kennedy, West and Holcomb: Regulation of attention to novel stimuli by frontal lobes: an event-related potential study. NeuroReport, 9(5):787-791 (1998).

Mesulam: From sensation to cognition. Brain, 121(6): 1013-1052 (1998).

Daffner, Mesulam, Cohen and Scinto: Mechanisms underlying diminished novelty-seeking behavior in patients With Probable Alzheimer's Disease. Neuropsychiatry, Neuropsychology, and Behavioral Neurology, 12(1): 58-66 (1999).

Nobre, Coull, Frith and Mesulam: Orbitofrontal cortex is activated during breaches of expectation in tasks of visual attention. Nature Neuroscience, 2(1): 11-12 (1999).

Kim, Gitelman, Nobre, Parrish, LaBar and Mesulam: The large-scale neural network for spatial attention displays multifunctional overlap but differential asymmetry. NeuroImage, 9(3): 269-277 (1999).

Mesulam: Spatial attention and neglect: parietal, frontal and cingulate contributions to the mental representation and attentional targeting of salient extrapersonal events. Phil. Trans. Royal Society of London, 354: 1325-1346 (1999).

LaBar, Gitelman, Parrish, and Mesulam: Neuroanatomic overlap of working memory and spatial attention networks: a functional MRI comparison within subjects. NeuroImage, 10, 695-704 (1999).

Mesulam: Neuroplasticity failure in Alzheimer’s disease: Bridging the gap between plaques and tangles. Neuron, 24, 521-529 (1999).

Nobre, Gitelman, Dias, and Mesulam: Covert Visual Spatial Orienting and Saccades: Overlapping Neural Systems. NeuroImage, 11 (2000), 210-216.

Mesulam: Brain, mind, and the evolution of connectivity. Brain and Cognition, 42 (2000), 4-6.

Daffner, Mesulam, Scinto, et al.: The central role of the prefrontal cortex in directing attention to novel events. Brain, 123 (2000), 927-939.

Daffner, Scinto, Calvo, Faust, Mesulam, et al.: The influence of stimulus deviance on electrophysiologic and behavioral responses to novel events. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 12:3 (2000), 393-406.

Mesulam, Nobre, Kim, Parrish, Gitelman:  Heterogeneity of cingulate contributions to spatial attention.  NeuroImage,  13, (2001): 1065-1072.

LaBar, Gitelman, Parrish, Kim, Nobre, Mesulam:  Hunger selectivity modulates corticolimbic activation to food stimuli in humans.  Behavioral Neuroscience, 115 (2001), 115 (2) 493-500.

Vandenberghe, Gitelman, Parrish, Mesulam:  Functional specificity of superior parietal mediation of spatial shifting.  NeuroImage, 14 (2001): 661-673.

Mesulam, Nobre, Kim, Parrish, Gitelman:  Heterogeneity of cingulate contributions to spatial attention.  NeuroImage, 13 (2001), 1065-1072.

Mesulam:  Primary Progressive Aphasia.  Ann Neurol, 49 (2001), 425-432.

Vandenberghe, Gitelman, Parrish, Mesulam.  Location- or feature-based targeting of peripheral attention.  NeuroImage, 14 (2001) 37-47.

 

GITELMAN

Holzer JC, Gitelman DR, Price BH. Efficacy of buspirone in the treatment of dementia with aggression (letter). American Journal of Psychiatry. 1995, 152, (5), 812.

Gitelman DR, Alpert NM, Kosslyn SM, Daffner K, Scinto L, Thompson W, Mesulam M-M: Functional imaging of human right hemisphere activation for exploratory movements. Annals of Neurology, 1996, 39, 174-179.

Gitelman, Nobre, Parrish, LaBar, Kim, Meyer and Mesulam: A Large-Scale Distributed Network for Covert Spatial Attention: Further Anatomical Delineation Based on Stringent Behavioural and Cognitive Controls. Brain, 122, (6), 1093-1106, 1999.

Gitelman, Parrish, LaBar, and Mesulam: Rapid Communication: Real-Time Monitoring of Eye Movements Using Infrared Video-oculography during Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Frontal Eye Fields. NeuroImage, 11, 58-65, 2000.

 

 

 


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