- Raymond Dean
Raymond Dean (born
September 24 ,1946 inNew York ) is the George and Frances Ball Distinguished Professor of Neuropsychology and professor of psychology atBall State University .Early history
His interest in Neuropsychology was evident during studies at the
State University of New York at Albany . There he received a B.A. (Magna cum Laude) in Psychology and an M.S. in Psychological Research and Psychometrics. As a Parachek-Frazier Research Fellow, he was awarded a Ph.D. in school/child clinical psychology in 1978 byArizona State University . His neuropsychological internship was at the Arizona Neuropsychiatric Hospital and postdoctoral training at theUniversity of Wisconsin at Madison . Since that time, Professor Dean has been an active scholar in Neuropsychology and has held faculty appointments at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Distinguished Visiting Faculty of the NIMH Staff College, and Ball State University. Early on, Dean(1985a) stressed, the utility of neuropsychological assessment as a tool in the diagnoses and localization of brain damage. [cite book | last = Dean| first = R.S.| authorlink = | coauthors = J.D. Cavenar, R. Michels, H.K. H., Brodie, A.M. Cooper, S.B. Guze, L.L. Judd, G.L. Klerman, & A.J. Solnit. (Eds.)| title = Neuropsychological assessment| publisher = J.B. Lippincott Company| date = 1985| location = | pages = | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = ] Yet he argued for the of need for specificity of functions measured by these tests (e.g. memory).1980s
Early in the 1980s, Dean argued that without a functional bases to tests the increase in
scanning technology would have decrease the efficacy of neuropsychological assessment. [Dean, R.S. (1982, April). Invited speaker of the colloquium: Future of Neuropsychological Assessment. Brown University School of Medicine, Providence, RI.; Dean, R.S. (1983, June). Invited presentation of the three-day course, Measuring Neuropsychology: Diagnostic and epidemiological instruments. Staff College, National Institute of Mental Health, Leesburg, VA.] His concerns were realized with both the sophistication and geometric growth of radiological scanning techniques over the past 30 years. These computer driven scanning devices such as the CT scan , and more recently the less invasive MRI,and fMRI have begun offered microscopic views of the soft tissue of the central nervous system that was not possible prior to the early 1970s when skull x-rays were the state of the art.Dean stressed the importance of neuropsychological examinations which assesses individual functions, rehabilitation approaches as well as the method of defining adaptive behavior remaining following [ brain damage] . [Dean, R.S. (1985b). Perspectives on the future of neuropsychological assessment. In B.S. Plake and J.C. Witt (Eds.), Buros-Nebraska Series on Measurement and Testing. New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum, Inc.; Dean, R.S. (1985c). Foundation and rationale for neuropsychological bases of individual differences. In L.C. Hartlage & C.F. Telzrow (Eds.), The Neuropsychology of Individual Differences: A Developmental Perspective. New York: Plenumm Publishing Corp.] Although definitive knowledge concerning the anatomical integrity of the brain may be available, individual differences are such that the specific prediction of behavioral, cognitive and emotional expression of a given lesion is rare. Moreover, Professor Dean portrayed the future of neuropsychological assessment as influenced this continuing need to understand the patient’s behavioral deficits and planning interventions. This was a clear departure from the traditional ,atheoretical , accuraly bases seen in many long standing batteries. Dean’s concerns dovetailed with the work of Dr. Woodcock, [Woodcock, R. W. (1993). An information processing view of Gf-Gc theory. Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment [Monograph Series: WJ-R Monograph] , 80-102.] ,Cattell [Cattell, R. B. (1963). Theory of fluid and crystallized intelligence: A critical experiment. Journal of Educational Psychology, 54, 1-22.] and Horn [Horn, J. L. (1965). Fluid and crystallized intelligence: A factor analytic and developmental study of the structure among primary mental abilities. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Illinois, Champaign.] known as
(Gf-Gc theory) and later as theCattell, Horn & Carroll Model (CHC) [Carroll, J. B. (1997). The three-stratum theory of cognitive abilities. In D. P Flanagan, J. L. Genshaft, & P. L.Harrison (Eds.) Contemporary Cognitive Assessment: Theories, Tests and Issues. New York: Guilford .] which is an empirically derived theory of multiple cognitive abilities. TheDean-Woodcock Neuropsychological Model integrated the CHC Information Processing Model and the foundations of neuropsychology measures. [Dean, R. S. & Woodcock, R. W. (1999). The WJ-R and Bateria-R Neuropsychological Assessment: Research report number 3. Itasca, IL: Riverside Publishing.] Neuropsychological functioning, according to this model represented an interaction of various cognitive,noncognitive,emotional and sensory motor functions. Thus, theDean-Woodcock Neuropsychological Assessment Battery was adapted from the [Dean-Woodcock Model] , integrating information processing features as a foundation for neuropsychology assessment. [Dean, R . S. & Woodcock, R.W. (2003). The Dean-Woodcock Neuropsychological Battery. Itasca, IL: Riverside Publishing.]Current work
During his career, Dean has published numerous articles, books and tests in Neuropsychology. Most recently Dr. Dean co-authored the
Dean-Woodcock Neuropsychological Assessment System (Dean & Woodcock, 2001) and theDean-Woodcock Neuropsychological Sensory Motor Battery . [(Dean & Woodcock 2001).] During his work Dean was elected Fellow of theAmerican Psychological Association (Divisions: Clinical, Educational, School and Clinical Neuropsychology), theNational Academy of Neuropsychology , and theAmerican Psychopathological Association .Clinically active, Dean holds a Diploma from the
American Board of Professional Psychology and theAmerican Board of Professional Neuropsychology . He serves as Director of the Neuropsychology Laboratory at [Ball State University] and Director of Neuropsychology, Indiana Neuroscience Institute, St. Vincent Hospital and Health Care Center. Professor Dean was the founder and editor-in-chief of both theArchives of Clinical Neuropsychology and theBulletin of the National Academy of Neuropsychology . He served as editor-in-chief of the Journal of School Psychology and edits the Journal of Head Injury. Dean has been recognized for his accomplishments with the Lightner Witmer Award (A.P.A., Div. 16), an Outstanding Contribution Award from the National Academy of Neuropsychology, and the Richard E. Snow Research Award (APA, Div. 15). More recently, his accomplishments were recognized by the National Academy of Neuropsychology, theJournal of School Psychology , the Clinical Neuropsychology Division of APA, the [Lifetime Achievement Award in Neuropsychology] (National Association of School Psychologists), and the National Academy of Neuropsychology’s [President’s Medal of Achievement] . Professor Dean has served as President of both the Clinical Neuropsychology Division of the APA and the National Academy of Neuropsychology.References
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