Part I. Introduction
1. Historical perspectives
Gerald Goldstein, Daniel N, Allen, John DeLuca
PART II. Psychometric Foundations
2. How to develop an empirically based psychological test
Cecil Reynolds & Ron Livingston
Part III. Assessment of Intelligence
3. Interpreting pediatric intelligence tests: a framework from
evidence-based medicine
Andrew J. Freeman & Yen-Ling Chen
4. The development, expansion, and future of the WAIS-IV as a
cornerstone in comprehensive cognitive assessments
James A. Holdnack
Part IV. Achievement and Interest
5. Aptitude and achievement testing
Lynda J. Katz & Franklin C. Brown
6. Interest inventories
Jo-Ida C. Hansen
PART V. Neuropsychological Assessment
7. Sources of error and meaning in the pediatric neuropsychological
evaluation
Michael D. Welier, W. Grant Willis & Mary Lynne Kennedy
8. Adult comprehensive neuropsychological assessment
N. Allen & John DeLuca
9. Assessment in sports: psychological and neuropsychological
approaches
Ruben J. Echemendia, Frank M. Webbe, Victoria C. Merritt, Gabriela
Gonzalez
Part VI. Interviewing
10. Clinical interviewing
Daniel N. Allen & Megan L. Becker
11. Structured and Semi-structured interviews for
children
Christopher A. Kearney, Andrew Freeman, Victoria Bacon
12. Diagnostic and symptom interviews for adults
Daniel N. Allen & Megan Becker
Part VII. Personality Assessment
13. Overview of multidimensional inventories of psychopathology
with a focus on the MMPI-2
Carolyn L. Williams, James N. Butcher, Jacob A. Paulsen
14. The Rorschach
Philip Erdberg
Part VIII. Behavioral Assesment
15. Behavioral assessment of children
Ross W. Greene, Thomas H. Ollendick
16. Behavioral assessment of adults in clinical settings
Stephen N. Haynes, William H. O’Brien, Joseph Keawe’aimoku
Kaholokula
Part IX. Special Topics and Applications
17. Psychological assessment of the elderly
18. Forensic psychology: practice issues
MacNeill Horton, Henry V. Soper
19. Fairness in psychological testing
Zarui A. Melikyan, Anna V. Agranovich, Antonio E. Puente
20. Technological developments in assessment
Robert L. Kane, Thomas D. Parsons
Dr. Gerald Goldstein was a Senior Research Career Scientist in the
Department of Veterans' Affairs and a Professor of Psychiatry and
Psychology at the University of Pittsburgh. Formerly, Dr. Goldstein
was a research psychologist at the Topeka Veterans' Administration
Hospital, and a faculty member of the University of Kansas and the
Menninger Foundation. He had a Ph.D. degree in clinical psychology
obtained at the University of Kansas. Dr. Goldstein was a past
president of the International Neuropsychological Society, the
National Academy of Neuropsychology, and the Division of Clinical
Neuropsychology of the American Psychological Association. He was a
diplomate of the American Board of Professional Psychology in
clinical neuropsychology. He had published extensively in the field
of clinical neuropsychology, with particular emphases in the areas
of alcoholism, schizophrenia, autism, and adult learning
disability. Daniel Allen uses clinical and cognitive
neuropsychological approaches to study people with psychiatric and
neurological disorders. His aim is to understand better how the
brain supports complex cognitive activities such as memory,
attention, and problem solving. His recent work has focused on
understanding the considerable heterogeneity in neurocognitive
function exhibited by those with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder
by examining such factors as comorbid substance use disorders,
endophenotype expression, negative symptoms, trauma and premorbid
adjustment. He has also examined abnormalities in social cognition
and emotion processing as core features of these disorders, and has
developed a number of new methods to examine cognitive components
of the emotion processing system. More recently, he has
investigated neuropsychological and behavioral deficits associated
with traumatic brain injury in children and adolescents.
Dr. Allen was recently elected president of the National Academy of
Neuropsychology, and is a fellow of the American Psychological
Association (Division 40), National Academy of Neuropsychology, and
Western Psychological Association. He is the director of the
Neuropsychology Research Program at UNLV. He received his Ph.D. in
clinical psychology from the University of South Dakota in 1993.
John DeLuca, Ph.D. is the Senior Vice President for Research at
Kessler Foundation, a Professor in the Departments of Physical
Medicine & Rehabilitation (PM&R) Department of Neurology at
Rutgers New Jersey Medical School and a licensed psychologist in
the States of New Jersey and New York. Dr. DeLuca devotes 100% of
his time to research and training. He is currently studying
disorders of memory and information processing in a variety of
clinical populations including: Multiple Sclerosis, Aneurysmal
Subarachnoid Hemorrhage, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, and Traumatic
Brain Injury. Dr. DeLuca's accomplishments include over 275
published articles, abstracts, and chapters in these areas. He is
on the editorial board of several journals and serves as the editor
for special issues of the journal NeuroRehabilitation on Multiple
Sclerosis and for the journal Applied Neuropsychology on chronic
fatigue syndrome. Dr. DeLuca is listed in "Who is Who in Science
and Engineering, 1994-1995," and he is the recipient of early
career awards for his research from both the American Psychological
Association (Division 40: Clinical Neuropsychology) and the
National Academy of Neuropsychology. In 2005, Dr. DeLuca received
the Distinguished Researcher Award for the New Jersey Psychological
Association. In 2017, he was awarded the Fred Foley Award for Best
Practices in Mental Health and Multiple Sclerosis by the Consortium
of Multiple Sclerosis Centers for his outstanding contributions to
advancing research in the understanding and clinical treatment of
cognitive impairments in MS. He serves as a member and chair for
the Ph.D. Postdoctoral Fellowship Committee in the Department of
PM&R at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School (formerly,
UMDNJ-NJMS) and directs the post-doctoral fellowship program in
Neuropsychology for the Department. He is also a member and past
Chair of the IRB at Kessler Foundation. Dr. DeLuca serves on
numerous committees for both national and international societies
associated with Neuropsychology.
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