Pathologies of Speech and Language – Advances in Clinical Phonetics and Linguistics
Advances in Clinical Phonetics and Linguistics
Samenvatting
This volume gives a kaleidoscopic view on the field of clinical phonetics and linguistics. Topics include phonological issues in normal and defective development; aphasia, dysphasia, dysarthria, apraxia of speech and neurological conditions as well as critical evaluations of methods in clinical linguistics and phonetics.
Specificaties
Inhoudsopgave
<p>Preface.</p>
<p>Acknowledgements.</p>
<p>Part I: Phonology and Developmental Disorders.</p>
<p>Chapter 1 The status of phonological representation in fluetn aphasia, S Kohn.</p>
<p>Chapter 2 Sonority, glottals, and the characterization of (sonorant), B Heselwood.</p>
<p>Chapter 3 Constraint–based analysis of Japanese rhotacism, I. Ueda, S. Davis.</p>
<p>Chapter 4 Feature geometry, underspecification and child substitutions, M. Yavas, C.Core.</p>
<p>Chapter 5 Identification and discrimination of vowels in children with apraxic speech disorders, P. Groenne, B. Maassen, Th. Crul.</p>
<p>Chapter 6 Evaluation of speech perception and comprehension processes of children: Description and practical results, M. Gosy.</p>
<p>Chapter 7 The influence of sampling context upon young children′s production of fricative CV and CCV syllables, C. Miller, T. Spickler, R. Daniloff, R. Berry.</p>
<p>Chapter 8 The development of between–words processes in the connected speech of children aged between 3 and 7 years, C. Newton, B. Wells.</p>
<p>Chapter 9 Syntax at late stages of acquisition: Experiments with normal and SLI children, J. Niemi, . Hagg.</p>
<p>Chapter 10 A follow–up study of the linguistic and intellectual abilities of children who were phonologically disordered, Th. Powell, M. Elbert, D. Dinnsen.</p>
<p>Chapter 11 Language performance of black children as a function of their cultural mistrust, face of saminer, nature of reinforcement and language task, S. Terrell, R. Daniloff, M. Henoch, T. Flowers.</p>
<p>Chapter 12 Stuttering as a honological encoding defect? R. Burger, F. Wijnen.</p>
<p>Chapter 13 Perceptual properties of truncated infact protosyllabic CV – utterances, N. Roussel, R. Daniloff, M. Daly, K. Kao, C. Miller, R. Berry.</p>
<p>Part II: Hearing Impairment and Capd.</p>
<p>Chapter 14 Biology of speech sound perception and linguistic experience, N. Kraus, Th. McGee, D Burton Koch.</p>
<p>Chapter 15 Sensorineural hearing loss as a filter in word comprehension, V. Mildner.</p>
<p>Chapter 16 Speech perception tests on the internet: An example using filtering to simulate reception in hearing impairment, P. Korkko, K. Huttunen, M. Sorrri.</p>
<p>Chapter 17 Validation of a central auditory speech perception test for children, K. Neijenhuis, Th. Crul, B. Maassen, P. Groenen.</p>
<p>Chapter 18 Electrophysiological event–related indicators of speech perception performance in children using a cochlear implant, P. Groenen, A. Snik, P. van den Broek.</p>
<p>Chapter 19 Listener judgements of diphthongs by hearing and deaf speakers, E. Gerrits, B. Elsendoorn, W. Peeters.</p>
<p>Chapter 20 Durationsd and formants frequencies of diphthongs by hearing and deaf speakers, B. Elsendoorn, E. Gerrits, W. Peeters.</p>
<p>Chapter 21 Evaluation of vocal production and hearing abilities of 1–2 year–old children. Criteria for an early cochlear implantation, M. Holm, S. Frischmuth, S. Vinter.</p>
<p>Chapter 22 Interactive developmental intonology: Analysis of hearing mother–deaf children conversations, S. Vinter, C. Bried, M. Holm.</p>
<p>Part III: Aphasia and Neurological Condition.</p>
<p>Chapter 23 Single or dual semantics? Brain lateralization and the semantic processing of words, Y. Joanette, P. Goulet, L. Gagnon, B. LeBlanc, A. Simard.</p>
<p>Chapter 24 Case assignment in agrammatis: Analysis of the spontaneous speech of Dutch and German agrammatic aphasics, E. Ruigendijk, R. Bastiaanse, R. van Zonneveld.</p>
<p>Chapter 25 Production and perception of speech prosody in left– and right–brain–damaged adults, D. Huot, J. Ryalls, G. LeDorze.</p>
<p>Chapter 26 An acoustic investigation of pitch accent contrasts in the speech of a Norwegian patient with a left hemisphere lesion (Broca′s Aphasia), I. Moen, K. Sundet.</p>
<p>Chapter 27 Assessment of auditory word comprehension in aphasia, W. Ziegler, A. Jochmann, A. Zierdt.</p>
<p>Chapter 28 Remediation of apraxia of speech using magnetometer–feedback therapy, W. Katz, S. Bharadwaj.</p>
<p>Chapter 29 Palilalia in progressive supranuclear palsy: Failure of the articulatory buffer and subcortical inhibitory systems, H. Garratt, K. Bryan, J. Maxim.</p>
<p>Chapter 30 Acoustic analysis of coarticulation in cerebellar dysarthria, I. Hertrich, H. Ackermann.</p>
<p>Part IV: Methods in Clinical Linguistics.</p>
<p>Chapter 31 What hte neurologist can contribute to diagnosis and therapy in speech pathology, W. Renier.</p>
<p>Chapter 32 Clinical computational copus linguistics: A case study, M. Perkins, R. Catizone, I. Peers, Y. Wilts.</p>
<p>Chapter 33 exIPA transcriptions of consonants and vowels spoken by dyspractic children: Agreement and validity, W. Vieregge, B. Maassen.</p>
<p>Chapter 34 Isochronicity in speech production and the perception of categorical timing relations, V. Boucher.</p>
<p>Chapter 35 Effects of stricture–force changes on the coordination of oral and flottal aperture motions in normal speech, V. Boucher.</p>
<p>Chapter 36 Articulation difficulties following maxillofacial surgery: A single case study, A. Main, S. Kelly, G. Manley.</p>
<p>Chapter 37 CLEFTNET Scotland: Applications of new technology to the investigation and treatment of speech disorders associated with cleft palate within a Scottish context, M. Nairn, W. Hardcast, F. Gibbon, R. Razzell, L. Crampin, L. Harvey, B. Reynolds.</p>
<p>Chapter 38 MoDiaS – A PC–based system for routine acoustic analysis of neurogenic speech disorders, M. Merck, W. Ziegler.</p>
<p>Chapter 39 A comparison of computerized speech/voice anlaysis programs, S. Awan, T. Bressman, R. Sader, H. Horch.</p>
<p>Chapter 40 Measures of RMS nasalance using NasalView in patients undergoing secondary osteoplasty, S. Awan, T. Bressman, R. Sader, H. Horch.</p>
<p>Chapter 41 Does the syllable affliation of intervocalic consonantsd have an articulatory basis? Evidence from electromagnetic midsagittal artculography, N. Schiller, P. van Lieshout, A. Meyer, W. Levelt.</p>
<p>Chapter 42 Registration of lip and tongue movement with a new electromagnetic articulography instrument, H. Horn, Th. Scholl, H. Ackermann, I. Hertrich, R. Berndt, G.Goz.</p>
<p>Chapter 43 Variability of tongue–movement during speaking sequences in diagnosis of tongue–thrust, H. Horn, G. Goz, M. Bacher, J. Luther, D. Axman–Krcmar.</p>
<p>Chapter 44 Variability of tongue movement during normal swallowing and tongue–thrust, H. Horn, G. Goz, M. Bacher, J. Luther, D. Axmann0Krcmar.</p>
<p>Index.</p>