Clinical Management of Neurogenic Communicative DisordersDonnell F. Johns |
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Page 122
... normal por- tions of an incoming message . This prevents them from accumulating an entire message be- fore they switch their system to a " processing " state . Furthermore , patients ' processing sys- tems take longer - than - normal ...
... normal por- tions of an incoming message . This prevents them from accumulating an entire message be- fore they switch their system to a " processing " state . Furthermore , patients ' processing sys- tems take longer - than - normal ...
Page 214
... normal , or can be reduced even to a whisper . If a patient hears normally , normal loudness or only slightly increased loudness is usually most appropriate ; however , a number of ... normal , the normal profile can be preserved 214.
... normal , or can be reduced even to a whisper . If a patient hears normally , normal loudness or only slightly increased loudness is usually most appropriate ; however , a number of ... normal , the normal profile can be preserved 214.
Page 258
... normal and dysarthric patients . Pretreatment and posttreatment ranges of physiologic support for speech . Therefore the goal of essentially all dysarthria treatment is not normal speech , but compen- sated intelligibility . With ...
... normal and dysarthric patients . Pretreatment and posttreatment ranges of physiologic support for speech . Therefore the goal of essentially all dysarthria treatment is not normal speech , but compen- sated intelligibility . With ...
Contents
Auditory Comprehension and Aphasia 103 | 125 |
Treating Apraxia of Speech | 191 |
Surgical and Prosthetic Management | 311 |
Copyright | |
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abnormal apha aphasic patients aphasic subjects apraxia of speech apraxic Aronson articulation articulatory auditory comprehension behavior brain Broca's aphasia Brookshire cerebrovascular accident clini clinical clinician coexisting cues Darley deficits delayed auditory feedback dementia diagnosis disease drill dysarthria dysarthric patients effect errors evaluation example facilitation feedback function gestures Graphic guage hemisphere hypernasality imitation improve influence intellectual impairment involved language of confusion laryngeal lesions loudness ment methods modes motor speech movements multiple sclerosis muscle nasal Netsell neurogenic neurologic normal onset Overall palatal palatal lift pause percentile perceptual performance pharyngeal phonetic physiologic support PICA Porch Index posture present problems produce prognosis prosody recovery reorganization respiration respiratory result Rosenbek sentences sequences sessions severe apraxia sounds specific speech and language Speech Disorders Speech Hear speech pathologist stimuli stress syllables symptoms tasks therapeutic tients tion Token Test treatment utterance velopharyngeal incompetency verbal Vignolo visual vowels Wertz words