search for books and compare prices
David E. Tupper has written 6 work(s)
Search for other authors with the same name
displaying 1 to 6 |
at end
show results in order: alphabetically | oldest to newest | newest to oldest
Hardcover:
9780306464942 | Plenum Pub Corp, October 1, 2000, cover price $199.00
Paperback:
9781461354413 | Springer Verlag, March 1, 2013, cover price $159.00
Product Description: This work analyzes the interrelation and interdependence between personality changes, which differ in their nature and phenomenology, and disorders of certain aspects of communicative ability. The author's approach is an interdisciplinary and comprehensive study of neuropsychological, psychopathological and special education data on the basis of communication theories...read more
Hardcover:
9780306479946 | Plenum Pub Corp, January 1, 2004, cover price $99.00
Paperback:
9781461348771 | Reprint edition (Springer Verlag, October 23, 2012), cover price $119.00 | About this edition: This work analyzes the interrelation and interdependence between personality changes, which differ in their nature and phenomenology, and disorders of certain aspects of communicative ability.
Product Description: For a period of some fifteen years following completion of my internship training in clinical psychology (1950-1951) at the Washington University School of Medicine and my concurrent successful navigation through that school's neuroanatomy course, clinical work in neuropsychology for me and the psychologists of my generation consisted almost exclusively of our trying to help our physician colleagues differentiate patients with neurologic disorders from those with psychiatric disorders...read more
Hardcover:
9780792308478 | Kluwer Academic Pub, January 1, 1991, cover price $329.00 | About this edition: For a period of some fifteen years following completion of my internship training in clinical psychology (1950-1951) at the Washington University School of Medicine and my concurrent successful navigation through that school's neuroanatomy course, clinical work in neuropsychology for me and the psychologists of my generation consisted almost exclusively of our trying to help our physician colleagues differentiate patients with neurologic disorders from those with psychiatric disorders.
Paperback:
9781461288121 | Reprint edition (Springer Verlag, September 27, 2011), cover price $229.00 | About this edition: For a period of some fifteen years following completion of my internship training in clinical psychology (1950-1951) at the Washington University School of Medicine and my concurrent successful navigation through that school's neuroanatomy course, clinical work in neuropsychology for me and the psychologists of my generation consisted almost exclusively of our trying to help our physician colleagues differentiate patients with neurologic disorders from those with psychiatric disorders.
For a period of some fifteen years following completion of my internship training in clinical psychology (1950-1951) at the Washington University School of Medicine and my concurrent successful navigation through that school's neuroanatomy course, clinical work in neuropsychology for me and the psychologists of my generation consisted almost exclusively of trying to help our physician colleagues differentiate patients with neurologic from those with psychiatric disorders. In time, experience led all of us from the several disciplines involved in this enterprise to the conclusion that the crude diag nostic techniques available to us circa 1945-1965 had garnered us little valid information upon which to base such complex, differential diagnostic decisions. It now is gratifying to look back and review the remarkable progress that has occurred in the field of clinical neuropsychology in the four decades since I was a graduate student. In the late 1940s such pioneers as Ward Halstead, Alexander Luria, George Yacorzynski, Hans-Lukas Teuber, and Arthur Benton already were involved in clinical studies that, by the late 1960s, would markedly have improved the quality of clinical practice. However, the only psychological tests that the clinical psychologist of my immediate post-Second World War generation had as aids for the diagnosis of neurologically based conditions involving cognitive deficit were such old standbys as the Wechsler Bellevue, Rorschach, Draw A Person, Bender Gestalt, and Graham Kendall Memory for Designs Test.
Hardcover:
9780792306719 | Kluwer Academic Pub, October 1, 1990, cover price $369.00 | About this edition: For a period of some fifteen years following completion of my internship training in clinical psychology (1950-1951) at the Washington University School of Medicine and my concurrent successful navigation through that school's neuroanatomy course, clinical work in neuropsychology for me and the psychologists of my generation consisted almost exclusively of trying to help our physician colleagues differentiate patients with neurologic from those with psychiatric disorders.
Paperback:
9781461288084 | Reprint edition (Springer Verlag, September 27, 2011), cover price $369.00
Product Description: Bringing together leading experts--and providing vital insights to guide clinical practice--this is the first volume to comprehensively address childhood motor disorders from a neuropsychological perspective. The book explores the neural and behavioral bases of movement disorders and summarizes current findings from applied research...read more
Hardcover:
9781593850647 | Guilford Pubn, September 1, 2004, cover price $91.00 | About this edition: Bringing together leading experts--and providing vital insights to guide clinical practice--this is the first volume to comprehensively address childhood motor disorders from a neuropsychological perspective.
Hardcover:
9780205101689 | Allyn & Bacon, January 1, 1987, cover price $46.95 | also contains Mosby's Paramedic Textbook
displaying 1 to 6 |
at end