
Speech and Language
Advances in Basic Research and Practice
- 1st Edition, Volume 6 - March 28, 1982
- Imprint: Academic Press
- Editor: Norman J. Lass
- Language: English
- Paperback ISBN:9 7 8 - 1 - 4 8 3 2 - 0 6 5 1 - 6
- eBook ISBN:9 7 8 - 1 - 4 8 3 2 - 1 9 9 4 - 3
Speech and Language: Volume 6, Advances in Basic Research and Practice is a collection of papers that discusses pathology, theories, and clinical issues related to language and… Read more

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Request a sales quoteSpeech and Language: Volume 6, Advances in Basic Research and Practice is a collection of papers that discusses pathology, theories, and clinical issues related to language and speech. Some papers describe auditory discrimination and intervention techniques for articulatory defects, assessment of auditory disorders, phonological systems of deaf speakers, as well as speech and language characteristics of aging persons. Other papers discuss issues in language and cognitive assessment of black children, distortions of the supralaryngeal vocal tract, the structure of the human tongue, transformation of the acoustic signal into speech, and methods to estimate glottal volume velocity waveform properties. One paper suggests guidelines that investigators should be aware of before giving any speech discriminating tests. These guidelines include the following: use of age appropriate tests, use of culturally unbiased tests, adaption of intrapersonal testing procedures, and utilization of recorded stimulus presentation. Another paper reviews auditory processing deficits associated with brain damage and the considerations applicable to the assessment of such disorders. It also suggests treatment planning. One paper concludes that the phonological structure of a fluent speech requires that the listener employ higher level sources of knowledge while making phonetic decisions. Linguists, speech pathologists., psychologists, speech therapists, neurologists, neuropsychologists, and neurolinguists will find the collection highly relevant.
List of Contributors
Preface
Contents of Previous Volumes
Auditory Discrimination: Evaluation and Intervention
I. Introduction
II. Auditory Discrimination: Evaluation
III. Auditory Discrimination: Intervention
IV. Summary
References
Evaluation and Treatment of Auditory Deficits in Adult Brain-Damaged Patients
I. Introduction
II. Historical Interest in the Auditory Processing Deficits in Brain-Damaged Adults
III. Considerations Applicable to the Assessment of Auditory Disorders
IV. Treatment Planning for Patients with Auditory Processing Deficits
V. Some Suggestions for the Future
VI. Summary
References
A Pragmatic Approach to Phonological Systems of Deaf Speakers
I. Introduction
II. Methods of Data Acquisition in Research on Deaf Speech
III. A Functional Taxonomy of Phonological Errors in Deaf Speakers
IV. Vowel and Suprasegmental Errors
V. Conclusions
References
Speech and Language Characteristics of an Aging Population
I. Introduction
II. Historical Perspective
III. A Theoretical Model of Communication Change in the Aging
IV. Current Research Results
V. The Acoustic Characteristics of an Aging Population
VI. Linguistic Results
VII. Relationships among Acoustic, Perceptual, and Linguistic Characteristics
VIII. Research Needs
References
Language and Cognitive Assessment of Black Children
I. Introduction
II. Understanding Black English
III. Assessment Principles
IV. Alternative Assessment Strategies
V. Conclusion
References
Effect of Aberrant Supralaryngeal Vocal Tracts on Transfer Function
I. Introduction
II. Description of Patient Population
III. Acoustical Studies
IV. Assessment of Current Status
References
The Human Tongue: Normal Structure and Function and Associated Pathologies
I. Introduction
II. Comparative Anatomy
III. Developmental Anatomy
IV. Muscles
V. Innervation
VI. Blood Supply
VII. Gustatory System
VIII. Physiology
IX. Pathologies
X. Syndromes
XI. Concluding Remarks
References
From an Acoustic Stream to a Phonological Representation: The Perception of Fluent Speech
I. Phonetic Perception
II. The Question of Units
III. Modeling the Perception of Fluent Speech
IV. Conclusion
References
Estimation of Glottal Volume Velocity Waveform Properties: A Review and Study of Some Methodological Assumptions
I. Introduction
II. Part 1: A Review of Methods Used to Estimate Glottal Volume Velocity Waveform Properties
III. Part 2: An Evaluation of the Uniformity Assumption Underlying the Reflectionless Tube Method
References
Index
- Edition: 1
- Volume: 6
- Published: March 28, 1982
- No. of pages (eBook): 494
- Imprint: Academic Press
- Language: English
- Paperback ISBN: 9781483206516
- eBook ISBN: 9781483219943
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