
Kristine Lundgren, Sc.D., CCC-SLP
Professor, Department Chair and Director of Graduate Studies
Sc.D., Boston University
Phone:
(336) 334-5184
Email:
k_lundgr@uncg.edu
Curriculum Vitae
Classes Taught
Doctoral
- CSD 760 – Advanced Doctoral Seminar
- CSD 790 – Directed Research
- CSD 790 – Independent Study
Master’s
- CSD 588- Neurology for Speech and Hearing Sciences: Graduate
- CSD 606 – Cognitive Linguistic Disorders in Adults
- CSD 632 – Research Methods in Communication Sciences and Disorders
- CSD 633 – Special Projects in Communication Sciences and Disorders
- CSD 678 – Advanced Clinical Practicum in Speech-Language Pathology
Undergraduate
- CSD 580- Introduction to Cognitive-Linguistic Disorders in Adults (UNCG)
- CSD 588- Neurology for Speech and Hearing Sciences (UNCG)
Brief Bio
Kristine Lundgren, Sc.D., CCC-SLP is a Professor in the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro (UNCG).
She received her BA from the University of Connecticut and her MS and Sc.D. from Boston University. Dr. Lundgren completed an NIH postdoctoral fellowship in Aphasiology at the Harold Goodglass Aphasia Research Center. In 2004, Dr. Lundgren completed an internship in Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) at the Center for Mindfulness, a program in the Division of Preventive and Behavioral Medicine, Department of Medicine, at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.
Research Interests
Dr. Lundgren’s current research projects include the exploration of figurative language impairments following right hemisphere stroke or traumatic brain injury (TBI), impairments in Theory of Mind following acquired brain injury, intimate partner violence related TBI, and the impact of short-term study abroad on professional growth and development.
Dr. Lundgren directs the Cognitive-Linguistics Lab at UNCG where she conducts and supervises research on the communication disorders associated with stroke and traumatic brain injury.
Please use the links below to access the training programs used in Dr. Lundgren’s lab