Compensating for Psychological Deficits and Declines

Managing Losses and Promoting Gains

Compensating for Psychological Deficits and Declines: Managing Losses and Promoting Gains

Price: $69.95add to cart

About the Book

The concept of compensation in psychology refers to processes through which a gap or mismatch between current accessible skills and environmental demands is reduced or closed. These gaps can be principally the result of losses, such as those associated with aging or interpersonal role changes; injuries, such as those that may occur to the neurological or sensory systems; organic or functional diseases, such as the dementias or schizophrenia; and congenital deficits, such as those apparent in autism or some learning disabilities.

Whether the demand-skill gaps can be bridged completely, reduced only moderately, or are impossible to close, depends on a variety of factors. In every case, however, the guiding notions of compensation are that:
* some such deficits may be amendable,
* the continuation of the effects of the gap may be avoidable, and
* some functioning may be recoverable.
In this sense, compensation is related to adaptation; it is about overcoming deficits, managing the effects of losses, and promoting improvement in psychological functioning.

Compensation is a concept that has a long and rich history in numerous domains of psychological research and practice. To date, however, few of the relevant research domains have benefitted explicitly or optimally from considering alternative perspectives on the concept of compensation. Although researchers and practitioners in several areas of psychology have actively pursued programs with compensation as a central concept, communication across disciplinary divides has been lacking. Comparing and contrasting the uses and implications of the concept across neighboring (and even not-so-adjacent) areas of psychology can promote advances in both theoretical and practical pursuits.

The goal of this book is to carry inchoate integrative efforts to a new level of clarity. To this end, the editors have recruited major authors from selected principal areas of research and practice in psychological compensation. The authors review the current state of compensation scholarship in their domains of specialization. State-of-the-art reviews of this rapidly expanding area of scholarship are, therefore, collected under one cover for the first time. In this way, a wide variety of readers who might otherwise rarely cross professional paths with one another, can quickly learn about alternative preferences, agendas and methods, as well as novel research results, interpretations, and practical applications.

Designed to contain broad, deep, and current perspectives on compensation, this volume continues the processes of:
* explicating the concept of compensation;
* linking and distinguishing compensation from neighboring concepts;
* describing the variety of compensatory mechanisms operating in a wide range of phenomena; and
* illustrating how compensatory mechanisms can be harnessed or trained to manage losses or deficits and to promote gains or at least maintenance of functioning.

Table of Contents

Contents: Preface. Part I: Conceptual Issues in Psychological Compensation. R.A. Dixon, L. Bäckman, Concepts of Compensation: Integrated, Differentiated, and Janus-Faced. T.A. Salthouse, Refining the Concept of Psychological Compensation. M. Marsiske, F.R. Lang, P.B. Baltes, M.M. Baltes, Selective Optimization With Compensation: Life-Span Perspectives on Successful Human Development. Part II: Compensation in the Life Course. J. Brandtstädter, D. Wentura, Adjustment to Shifting Possibility Frontiers in Later Life: Complementary Adaptive Modes. L.L. Carstensen, K.A. Hanson, A.M. Freund, Selection and Compensation in Adulthood. K.F. Ferraro, M.M. Farmer, Social Compensation in Adulthood and Later Life. N. Charness, E.A. Bosman, Compensation Through Environmental Modification. Part III: Compensation for Neurological Impairments. B.A. Wilson, Memory Rehabilitation: Compensating for Memory Problems. D.S. Woodruff-Pak, C. Hanson, Plasticity and Compensation in Brain Memory Systems in Aging. L.J. Gonzalez Rothi, Behavioral Compensation in the Case of Treatment of Acquired Language Disorders Resulting From Brain Damage. C.L. Grady, R. Parasuraman, Functional Compensation in Alzheimer's Disease. Part IV: Compensation in Sensory and Skill Domains. J. Rönnberg, Perceptual Compensation in the Deaf and Blind: Myth or Reality? R.F. West, K.E. Stanovich, A.E. Cunningham, Compensatory Processes in Reading. M.J. Stones, A. Kozma, Compensation in Athletic Sport.

RSS iconNew Book Titles

Biblical Perspectives on AgingBiblical Perspectives on Aging

God and the Elderly, Second Edition

  • By J. Gordon Harris
As the population of older Americans grows, meaningful perspectives on aging are needed by both the young and the old. Biblical Perspectives on Aging: God...

Published February 14th 2008 by Routledge.

Cognitive gerontology: Cognitive change in old ageCognitive gerontology: Cognitive change in old age

A Special Issue of Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, Section A: Human Experimental Psychology

  • Edited by Patrick Rabbitt

The worldwide demographic explosion in numbers of older people makes the study of cognitive change in old age of obvious practical interest. It is also...

Published January 24th 2008 by Psychology Press.

see more about new books…

Sign Up For Special Book OffersSign Up For Special Book Offers

We're now offering exclusive online discounts for our email alerts subscribers.

To make sure you receive details of pre-publication offers, exclusive online discounts on selected items, and book news please subscribe to our email alerts, choosing the subject areas you're interested in. You'll be sent an email with a link to click to confirm your subscription.

If you use any anti-spam software please make sure you add "webmaster@psypress.com" and "webmaster@routledgementalhealth.com" to your list of allowed senders otherwise you won't receive your discount offers!

sign up for email alerts for new books...

info

We're currently displaying the books available for customers from the United States.

If you're not in the United States please:

change your preferences.

Copyright © Psychology Press and Routledge, an informa business 2008.