Clinical Management of Neurogenic Communicative DisordersDonnell F. Johns |
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Page 29
... example , a patient may be unable to name an object in a sentence completion task but will succeed when the printed name of the object is given . Finally , reducing the number of alternatives in a response matrix may facilitate per ...
... example , a patient may be unable to name an object in a sentence completion task but will succeed when the printed name of the object is given . Finally , reducing the number of alternatives in a response matrix may facilitate per ...
Page 56
... example , other medical and rehabilitative disciplines can be acquainted with the patient's level of listening , reading , speaking , and writing abilities . They can be told which stim- ulus modes are best for presenting information ...
... example , other medical and rehabilitative disciplines can be acquainted with the patient's level of listening , reading , speaking , and writing abilities . They can be told which stim- ulus modes are best for presenting information ...
Page 81
... example , the patient with bilateral trauma who remains on the critical list because of respiratory involvement has a poorer prognosis for speech improvement than the patient with bilateral trauma whose tracheotomy has been closed and ...
... example , the patient with bilateral trauma who remains on the critical list because of respiratory involvement has a poorer prognosis for speech improvement than the patient with bilateral trauma whose tracheotomy has been closed and ...
Contents
Description Diagnosis | 97 |
Surgical and Prosthetic Management | 153 |
Some Principles | 179 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
abnormal aphasia therapy aphasic approach apraxia of speech apraxic patients Aronson articulation articulatory auditory comprehension behavior brain Broca's aphasia Cleft Palate clinical clinician coexisting Communicative Ability confabulation cues Darley deficits dementia developmental apraxia diagnosis differentiating disease drill dysarthria dysarthric patients effect errors evaluation example facilitation function gestures goals Graphic hypernasality imitation improve influence intellectual impairment involved language of confusion LaPointe laryngeal lesion loudness ment methods modes Motor Speech Disorders movements muscle nasal Netsell neurogenic neurologic neuropathologies normal onset Output Oral Stimuli Overall palatal lift percentile perceptual performance pharyngeal pharyngeal flap phonetic PICA Porch Index posture problems produce prognosis prosody prosthesis recovery rehabilitation reorganization reported respiratory result Rosenbek sentence sessions severe apraxia sounds specific speech and language Speech Disorders Speech Hear speech pathologist strategies stress subtests suprasegmentals syllables symptoms tasks Test therapeutic thria tients tion treatment utterance velopharyngeal velopharyngeal incompetency Verbal Vignolo visual vowels Wertz words