Resource Centre

Our resource centre aims to introduce, reinforce and expand learning on all things aphasia. By collecting and gathering the best available information and introducing our own, we hope this centre can be both useful and supportive.

Common Questions

What is Aphasia?

Aphasia is an acquired language problem caused by stroke or brain injury. It can affect speaking, understanding, reading, and writing, but it does not affect a person's intelligence or competence. People with aphasia still have thoughts, ideas, and stories to share. This video is a good starting point if you or someone you love is new to the diagnosis, and includes a short film from our community advocacy group.

What is Neuroplasticity? (And Why It Matters After Stroke)

Your brain can change. Even after a stroke.

In this short video, we explain neuroplasticity in plain language. What it is, and why it matters for people living with aphasia.

Therapy is not just practice. It helps the brain build new pathways for language. This can happen months or even years after a stroke.

Why Communication Partner Training Matters

Aphasia affects communication, not intelligence. People with aphasia still have thoughts, ideas, and stories to share, but conversation is a two-person process. Small changes in how a partner communicates can make a real difference in how well it goes. This video explains what communication partner training is and why it's one of the most important parts of aphasia care.

Inside Aphasia Therapy: The Role of a Speech-Language Pathologist

What actually happens in aphasia therapy? In this video, we walk through what a speech-language pathologist does, from assessment to goal setting to ongoing treatment.

An SLP starts by assessing every part of communication affected by aphasia: speaking, understanding, reading, and writing. From there, goals are built around what matters most in someone's daily life, not a generic checklist. Treatment is individualized, because aphasia looks different in every person.

Shawna Fleming Shawna Fleming

What Does a Behaviour Analyst Do in Aphasia Therapy?

A Behaviour Analyst can help ensure that therapy is:

Structured but still personal
Intensive but not overwhelming
Data-informed but still human
Consistent across team members
Adjusted when progress stalls
Focused on real communication
Designed to build independence over time

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Scientific Publications

We aim to use the best evidence available and to continue to advance our field with our own scientific publications. Here, you’ll find a selection of scientific publications that can provide additional insight and education.