Sue Franklin
Professor
Clinical Therapy
University of Limerick
Ireland
Biography
I worked for many years as a speech and language therapist, working at first with pre-school children and eventually specialising in dysphasia. After a master's degree in London, my first research post was at the Applied Psychology Unit in Cambridge, working with John Morton and Karalyn Patterson looking at effectiveness of anomia therapy. In 1989 I was awarded a PhD from City University, supervised by Karalyn Patterson, for research applying cognitive neuropsychological models to categorise auditory comprehension disorders in aphasia. Before coming to the University of Limerick I worked at UCL, London, the University of York and the University of Newcastle. At Newcastle my research centred on sentence processing disorders and phonological output disorders in naming. With David Howard and Anne Whitworth I worked with colleagues in Tokyo to develop a Japanese Aphasia Battery (SALA). With David Howard I obtained funding from the Tavistock Trust for Aphasia to establish an Aphasia Clinic at the University, which continues to offer 3-month blocks of intensive therapy to people with aphasia. I was instrumental in setting up the North East Trust for Aphasia which raises money to provide more long term support for people with aphasia.
Research Interest
Aphasia: Treatment for anomia, including software for therapy; Aphasia assessment in different languages; Setting aphasia research prioriites; International review of aphasia services (Cost Action: Collaboration of Aphasia Triallists); Effective service provision. Post-Primary Speech Language and Communication Needs: Evaluation of SLCN at post-primary level; Development and evaluation of treatments for SLCN; SLT/Teacher collaboration.