Supporting communication for patients with neurodegenerative disease (Fried-Oken, Mooney & Peters, 2015)
This review discusses the benefits of AAC for individuals with ALS, primary progressive aphasia, or Alzheimer’s disease.
This review discusses the benefits of AAC for individuals with ALS, primary progressive aphasia, or Alzheimer’s disease.
We are pleased to make a limited number of free ePrints available for the following articles.
Alison Wilson will be contributing to the RERC on AAC as a member of our Advisory Board.
Student Team: Steven Ciez, Brad Cronin, Justin Kinslow, Justin Smith, Lulu Sun University: Penn State University Abstract: The team has been tasked with modifying a child’s toy race car so that children having difficulty interacting with their… Cartastic (T3, AAC Incubator)
Jessica Caron and Janice Light report the results of an online focus group that was used to investigate the experiences of nine individuals with cerebral palsy who use augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) and social media.