Faculty
Susan T. Jackson
Associate Professor
Department of Hearing and Speech
University of Kansas Medical Center
Phone: (913) 588-5937
FAX: (913) 588-5923
sjackson@kumc.edu
B.A. Experimental Psychology, 1984, Dalhousie University
M.Sc. Human Communication Disorders, 1986, Dalhousie University
Ph.D. Speech-Language Pathology, 1992, University of Pittsburgh
Research
Dr. Jackson's research interests include language disorders associated with normal aging, dementia,
and stroke. She has conducted intervention studies with individuals who have Alzheimer's disease and
who reside in long term care facilities, examined the effect of dual task performance in stroke
and normal aging, and examined the validity of aphasia therapy materials.
Selected Publications
Kemper, S., McDowd, J., Pohl, P, Herman, R., & Jackson, S.T. (in press). Revealing language deficits
following stroke: The cost of doing two things at once. Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition.
Jackson, S.T. (2002). Speech. In David J. Ekerdt, Robert A. Applebaum, Karen C. Holden, Stephe
G. Post, Kenneth Rockwood, Richard Schulz, Richard L. Sprott, & Peter Uhlenberg (Eds.).
Encyclopedia of Aging. New York: Macmillan Reference USA.
O'Hanlon, L., & Jackson, S.T. (2000). A look at the neuropsychological approach to the evaluation
and treatment of aphasia. California Speech, Language, and Hearing Association Magazine,
November/December.
Lastine-Sobecks, J.L., Jackson, S.T., & Paolo, A.M. (1998). Identifying the pronunciation of
irregularly-spelled words: Relation to Verbal IQ. The Clinical Neuropsychologist, 12, 189-19.
Teel, C., Dunn, W., Jackson, S.T., & Duncan, P. (1997). The role of the environment in fostering
independence: Conceptual and methodological issues in developing an instrument. Topics in Stroke
Rehabilitation, 4, 28-40.
Thomas, C.A., & Jackson, S.T. (1997). The validity of reading comprehension therapy materials.
Journal of Communication Disorders, 30, 231-242.
Flanagan, J.L., & Jackson, S.T. (1997). Test-retest reliability of three aphasia tests: Performance
of non-brain-damaged older adults. Journal of Communication Disorders, 30, 33-42.
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