Brain Friends
Brain Friends: The Podcast is a global space for stroke, science, and equity. Hosted by Angie Cauthorn — two-time stroke survivor and unapologetic aphasia advocate — this show unpacks the cognitive, behavioral and communication disorders that follow stroke, and the systems that shape recovery.
This podcast began with my friend and co-host, Dr. D. Seles Gadson — a brilliant neuroscientist, speech-language pathologist, and fearless champion for equity in healthcare. Her work focused on health disparities in aphasia care, particularly within the Black community, and she believed deeply in making science accessible for all. I carry her legacy forward in every conversation.
There are no survivor interviews here. Instead, we focus on the research, the roadblocks, and the real work of making neurorehabilitation more equitable, inclusive, and understood — especially for people with aphasia.
Our listeners span over 80 countries and include speech-language pathology professionals, researchers, and people with aphasia who want more than inspiration — they want information that matters.
If you're here to rethink recovery, reimagine access, and stay grounded in the science — you're in the right place.
Welcome to Brain Friends.
Brain Friends
The First ROSA: How One Idea Became a Movement for Aphasia Awareness
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
Episode Title Suggestion: The First ROSA: How One Idea Became a Movement for Aphasia Awareness
Episode Description:
Before it had a name, it had a vision.
What is now known as ROSA (Resource Orientation for Stroke and Aphasia) started here, with this day, in Philadelphia, PA. ARCH hosted the first Aphasia Awareness Fair in partnership with Temple University, bringing together 160 stroke survivors, aphasia caregivers, clinicians, and researchers under one roof for the first time.
This episode of Brain Friends recaps that landmark event and the conversations it sparked.
Angie Cauthorn and Dr. Seles, meeting in person for the first time, reflect on what made this day significant, not just as a celebration, but as a blueprint for community-centered aphasia care.
In this episode:
- What aphasia is, why it qualifies as an invisible disability, and why that distinction matters for survivors and families navigating the system
- Why neuroplasticity remains one of the most important concepts in aphasia recovery and what it means for long-term outcomes
- The case for aphasia research participation and why people with aphasia deserve a seat at the research table
- Why patient-reported outcomes matter to insurance companies, and why the myth that they don't is costing survivors access to better care
- The Sounds of Joy Choir, community vendors, and a room full of people committed to thriving
This episode is for stroke survivors, aphasia caregivers, speech-language pathologists, healthcare advocates, and anyone who believes community is a clinical strategy.
Keywords: aphasia awareness, stroke recovery, aphasia caregivers, neuroplasticity, invisible disability, patient-reported outcomes, aphasia conference Philadelphia, ARCH, ROSA, speech therapy after stroke, aphasia research, Brain Friends podcast, community aphasia support, aphasia resources, stroke survivors
https://aphasiaadvocates.com/ for Brain Friends Merch
https://aphasia.org/event/ask-the-expert-february-2026/
https://www.cognitiverecoverylab.com/seles
https://aphasia.org/stories/announcing-the-davetrina-seles-gadson-health-equity-grant-program/
Our beloved colleague, Dr. Davetrina Seles Gadson, passed away January 11, 2025. Dr. Gadson was an extraordinary speech-language pathologist and neuroscience researcher who devoted her energy to studying health disparities in aphasia recovery. She was a fierce advocate for improving services for individuals with aphasia, particularly Black Americans. Her research transformed our understanding of these health disparities and shed light on how we can address them. We were privileged to have Dr. Gadson as a cherished member of our lab community for four years, first as a postdoctoral fellow and then as an Instructor of Rehabilitation Medicine. She was still a close collaborator and friend to many of us at the time of her passing. Dr. Gadson was an incredible person—compassionate, inspiring, and full of life. Her dedication to advancing equity in aphasia recovery and her profound impact on our community will never be forgott...
Podcasts we love
Check out these other fine podcasts recommended by us, not an algorithm.