Bringing together clinicians and researchers who support people with aphasia.
www.bas.org.uk/
British Aphasiology Society
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A reminder that registration is FREE for all BAS members.
📆 24/06/26 9am-12.30pm
Registration and further information in link below
www.bas.org.uk/Home/events/...
It’s less than 3 weeks until the BAS Research Update Meeting!
A reminder that registration is FREE for BAS members.
The spotlight this week is on Sarah Johnston, City, St George's, University of London.
Sarah is a speech and language therapist who has worked with people with aphasia across the NHS pathway. She was a treating therapist for the LUNA feasibility study and currently works both clinically (NHS) and as an analyst with the MARS research team at City St George’s.
24/06/26 9-12.30
Further information and registration via link below.
www.bas.org.uk/Home/events/...
His research interests include aphasia, fronto-temporal dementia, care-partner services, end-of-life communication, SLP/SLT curriculum and scope-of-practice issues, and optimum classification of acquired verbal concerns to facilitate appropriate counseling and management.
Adithya Chandregowda, Ph.D., is an associate professor at Nova Southeastern University, United States. He holds a certificate of clinical competence in speech-language pathology from the American Speech Language Hearing Association.
Sarah will be presenting on ‘An innovative approach to discourse analysis; Can we harness AI to develop an app to support clinicians? ‘
It’s less than a week until the BAS Research Update Meeting!
Our 4th speaker is Adithya Chandregowda, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Nova Southeastern University, Florida.
Adithya will be presenting on ‘Recognizing the contributions of individuals with aphasia to clinical and academic communities’.
British Aphasiology Society
Sarah’s special interest is working holistically to help individuals living with aphasia work towards their linguistic and life participation goals. Sarah is passionate about inclusion, and her work is influenced by the social model of disability.