Kenneth Heilman

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Dr. Kenneth Heilman
Born Brooklyn, New York
Nationality United States
Field Behavioral neurologist
Institutions University of Florida
Alma mater Cornell University
University of Virginia
Neuropsychology
 
Topics

Brain-computer interfacesTraumatic Brain Injury
Brain regionsClinical neuropsychology
Cognitive neuroscienceHuman brain
NeuroanatomyNeurophysiology
PhrenologyCommon misconceptions

Brain functions

arousalattention
consciousnessdecision making
executive functionslanguage
learningmemory
motor coordinationsensory perception
planningproblem solving
thought

People

Arthur L. BentonDavid Bohm
António DamásioPhineas Gage
Norman GeschwindElkhonon Goldberg
Donald O. HebbKenneth Heilman
Muriel D. LezakBenjamin Libet
Rodolfo LlinásAlexander Luria
Brenda MilnerKarl Pribram
Oliver SacksRoger SperryH.M.K.C.

Tests

Bender-Gestalt Test
Benton Visual Retention Test
Clinical Dementia Rating
Continuous Performance Task
Glasgow Coma Scale
Hayling and Brixton tests
Lexical decision task
Mini-mental state examination
Stroop effect
Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale
Wisconsin card sorting task

Tools

Johari Window

Mind and Brain Portal
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Kenneth M. Heilman is an American behavioral neurologist.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Early life and career

Kenneth Heilman was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York. He attended and graduated from medical school at the University of Virginia in 1963. He did two years of residency in Internal Medicine at Cornell University Medical Center and Bellevue Hospital. During the Vietnam War era he joined the Air Force and served as chief of medicine at the N.A.T.O. Hospital in Izmir, Turkey. After leaving the airforce, Dr. Heilman went for residency in neurology at Harvard Medical School under Dr. Derek Denny-Brown and then continued there in a fellowship with Dr. Norman Geschwind. Upon completion of his fellowship, Dr. Heilman was recruited by the chairman of the department of neurology, Melvin Greer, and joined the faculty of the University of Florida Department of Neurology in 1970 as an Assistant Professor. He was promoted to Associate Professor in 1973 and Professor in 1975. He became the first James E. Rooks, Jr. Professor of Neurology in 1990, a newly endowed chair at the university. In 1998, Dr. Heilman he was among the first University of Florida faculty to receive the title of Distinguished Professor. Dr. Heilman is also the program director and chief of neurology at the North Florida/South Georgia Veterans Administration Hospital (Malcom Randall VAMC), as well as a professor of Clinical and Health Psychology at the University of Florida.

[edit] Clinical activity

Heilman is an active clinician who is Director of the Memory Disorders Clinic at UF/Shands, one of the 15 Memory Disorder Clinics supported by the Florida Department of Elder Affairs. This clinic serves those with memory and cognitive disorders, especially those suffering from Dementias such as Alzheimer's disease. His expertise as a clinician has been recognized by being listed in virtually every edition of the Best Doctors in America as well as other publications citing clinical excellence.

[edit] Research and teaching

Heilman has research interests in attentional, emotional and cognitive disorders. In addition to teaching medical and psychology students, he is active in resident education and been director of the University of Florida Behavioral Neurology Fellowship, that has trained many dozens of post doctoral fellows since its inception in 1976. Several of Dr. Heilman's former fellows are now leaders in academic Neurology, Neuropsychology, Speech Therapy, and other allied fields. Kenneth Heilman is the author of several texts, and has authored or co-authored more than 400 book chapters and articles in peer reviewed journals. Dr. Heilman’s research has been almost continuously funded by federal agencies (e.g., VA Merit Review and/or National Institutes of Health) for the last 30 years. Currently, he and his coworkers receive more than one million dollars a year in research funding. In recognition of his research contributions he was in the first group of individuals to receive the University of Florida Research Foundation Professorships. Dr. Heilman also received the Clinical Research Award from the University of Florida College of Medicine. The Behavioral and Cognitive Neurology Society has recognized him with an Outstanding Achievement Award for his research and educational contributions to Neurology.

Heilman's most recent book, on the neurology of creativity, is dedicated to the nearly 100 fellows he has had who have published with him. Dr. Heilman is lionized by his former fellows, whose cross collaborations are usually based on one or another of Dr. Heilman's creative expressions.

[edit] Academic leadership

Heilman has served as president of the International Neuropsychology Society and the Society for Behavioral and Cognitive Neurology.

[edit] Research advances

Research advances reported by Dr. Heilman and co-workers demonstrated that:

  • A cortico-limbic-reticular network mediates attention.
  • In most people, the right hemisphere is dominant for attending to both sides of space (see hemispatial neglect).
  • In most people, it was the right hemisphere of the brain that was important for emotional communication (prosody).
  • Skilled movement (praxis), such as tool use, is controlled in most people by a left hemisphere modular network where the parietal lobe contains the representations of the spatial trajectories for these skilled movements, and the frontal lobe transforms this into motor codes.
  • The right hemisphere's parietal lobe controls the autonomic nervous system.
  • First to describe orthostatic tremor.

[edit] Author and Editor

Books written or edited by Kenneth Heilman:

  • Matter of Mind: A Neurologist's View of Brain-behavior Relationships, by Kenneth M. Heilman, 2007
  • PGY1: Lessons in Caring, by Kenneth M. Heilman, 2007
  • Creativity and the Brain: by Kenneth M. Heilman, 2005
  • Clinical Neuropsychology: Fourth Edition, by Kenneth M. Heilman and Edward Valenstein, 2003
  • Neuropsychology OF Human Emotion: Distinguished contributions in psychology, by Kenneth M. Heilman & Paul Satz (editors), 1983
  • HANDBOOK FOR DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF NEUROLOGIC SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS by Kenneth M. Heilman, Watson, Robert T. and Greer, Melvin. 1977

[edit] External links