"Feeling part of things": personal construction of self after brain injury.
about
Post-traumatic growth following acquired brain injury: a systematic review and meta-analysisMotivational Interviewing to promote self-awareness and engagement in rehabilitation following acquired brain injury: A conceptual review.The psychology of stroke in young adults: the roles of service provision and return to work.A Longitudinal Study of Relationships between Identity Continuity and Anxiety Following Brain Injury.Changes in identity after aphasic stroke: implications for primary care'HeART of Stroke (HoS)', a community-based Arts for Health group intervention to support self-confidence and psychological well-being following a stroke: protocol for a randomised controlled feasibility study.Children's longing for everydayness: life following traumatic brain injury in the USA.Considering the student perspective in returning to school after TBI: a literature review.Return to work after acquired brain injury: a patient perspective.Conceptualizing belonging.Impact of rehabilitation on self-concept following traumatic brain injury: An exploratory systematic review of intervention methodology and efficacy.Embodiment and self in reorientation to everyday life following severe traumatic brain injury.A biopsychosocial investigation of changes in self-concept on the Head Injury Semantic Differential Scale.A transdiagnostic investigation of emotional distress after traumatic brain injury.Perceptions of recovery during the early transition phase from hospital to home following acquired brain injury: a journey of discovery.Personal narrative approaches in rehabilitation following traumatic brain injury: A synthesis of qualitative research.Present and future selves in Parkinson's disease."I've never been a yes person": Decision-making participation and self-conceptualization after severe traumatic brain injury.Constructing robust selves after brain injury: positive identity work among members of a female self-help group.Using mental visual imagery to improve autobiographical memory and episodic future thinking in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis patients: A randomised-controlled trial study.Self-Reflective Meaning Making in Troubled Times: Change in Self-Identity After Traumatic Brain Injury.An exploration of the experience of self in the social world for men following traumatic brain injury.Beyond academic performance: Practice implications for working with students following traumatic brain injury.Conceptualizing self and maintaining social connection following severe traumatic brain injury.Life goals and social identity in people with severe acquired brain injury: an interpretative phenomenological analysis.How cognitive neuroscience could be more biological-and what it might learn from clinical neuropsychology.Impact of SenseCam on memory, identity and mood in Korsakoff's syndrome: a single case experimental design study.Living with acquired brain injury: self-concept as mediating variable in the adjustment process.Driving and driving cessation after traumatic brain injury: processes and key times of need.We are not the same people we used to be: An exploration of family biographical narratives and identity change following traumatic brain injury.Affiliative and "self-as-doer" identities: Relationships between social identity, social support, and emotional status amongst survivors of acquired brain injury (ABI).Self-concept and self-esteem after acquired brain injury: a control group comparison.Impact of a family-focused intervention on self-concept after acquired brain injury.The nature of self-esteem and its relationship to anxiety and depression in adult acquired brain injury.Exploration of use of SenseCam to support autobiographical memory retrieval within a cognitive-behavioural therapeutic intervention following acquired brain injury.That which doesn't kill us can make us stronger (and more satisfied with life): the contribution of personal and social changes to well-being after acquired brain injury.The adaptation process after traumatic brain injury an individual and ongoing occupational struggle to gain a new identity.A new kind of normal: qualitative accounts of Multifamily Group Therapy for acquired brain injury.Capturing process and outcome in complex rehabilitation interventions: A "Y-shaped" model.Dysexecutive symptoms and carer strain following acquired brain injury: Changes measured before and after holistic neuropsychological rehabilitation.
P2860
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P2860
"Feeling part of things": personal construction of self after brain injury.
description
2008 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2008年の論文
@ja
2008年学术文章
@wuu
2008年学术文章
@zh-cn
2008年学术文章
@zh-hans
2008年学术文章
@zh-my
2008年学术文章
@zh-sg
2008年學術文章
@yue
2008年學術文章
@zh
2008年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
"Feeling part of things": personal construction of self after brain injury.
@en
type
label
"Feeling part of things": personal construction of self after brain injury.
@en
prefLabel
"Feeling part of things": personal construction of self after brain injury.
@en
P2093
P2860
P1476
"Feeling part of things": personal construction of self after brain injury.
@en
P2093
Becky Rous
Fergus Gracey
Juliette O'Dell
Kate Psaila
Kendra Shaw
Shemin Mohamed
Siobhan Palmer
P2860
P304
P356
10.1080/09602010802041238
P577
2008-10-01T00:00:00Z