Pathologies of Awareness: Bridging the Gap between Theory and Practice

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biopsychosocial model
Category=JM
clinical assessment of impaired self-awareness
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executive dysfunction
metacognition
neurological rehabilitation
phenomenological experience
self-monitoring deficits

Product details

  • ISBN 9781841698106
  • Weight: 450g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Aug 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This special issue of Neuropsychological Rehabilitation provides an opportunity to characterise some of the key clinical issues concerned with assessing and managing pathologies of subjective or conscious awareness. Elucidating the cognitive processes underlying awareness, and their corresponding phenomenological experiences, provides the necessary theoretical platform to inform assessments and justify interventions aimed at compensating for, and/or reducing the functional consequences of, impaired awareness. This special issue represents an attempt to bring together previously disparate research findings and conceptual issues from relevant fields within medicine and the psychological sciences and, in so doing, provide for a more coherent, comprehensive account which clinicians and theoreticians can use to better understand the apparently obvious but unwieldy construct of awareness.

Linda Clare is Senior Lecturer in Psychology, University of Wales Bangor.

Peter Halligan is a Professor of Psychology at Cardiff University.