Introduction to Communicative Disorders |
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Page 64
... structures . The Respiratory System Introduction to Communicative Disorders The major structures of speech include the respiratory , phonatory , and articulatory mechanisms . The nervous system , especially the brain , is responsible ...
... structures . The Respiratory System Introduction to Communicative Disorders The major structures of speech include the respiratory , phonatory , and articulatory mechanisms . The nervous system , especially the brain , is responsible ...
Page 75
... structures , is shaped into speech sounds by several structures including the tongue and the lips . This shaping of the speech sounds is articulation . The sound the larynx produces travels through the cavities of the throat and mouth ...
... structures , is shaped into speech sounds by several structures including the tongue and the lips . This shaping of the speech sounds is articulation . The sound the larynx produces travels through the cavities of the throat and mouth ...
Page 314
... structures that are normally closed . Cleft palate refers to the soft palate and to the bony roof of the mouth with an opening running through them . The upper lip also may have a cleft . There are many kinds of clefts of the lips , the ...
... structures that are normally closed . Cleft palate refers to the soft palate and to the bony roof of the mouth with an opening running through them . The upper lip also may have a cleft . There are many kinds of clefts of the lips , the ...
Contents
Specialists in Communication and Its Disorders | 41 |
Anatomy and Physiology of Speech and Hearing | 61 |
Articulation and Phonological Disorders | 107 |
Copyright | |
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acquisition adults affected aphasia articulation assessment associated audiologists auditory beginning behaviors bone brain called cause cerebral changes Chapter child cleft cleft palate client clinical clinician close Communicative Disorders conduction correct course cranial nerves damage deaf described difficulty educational English example Figure fluency frequency functions Give hard hearing impairment hearing loss impairment important individuals Introduction to Communicative kinds known language language disorders laryngeal lower major meaning mechanism method motor mouth move movements muscles nasal nerve normal opening oral organic palate parents patients persons pitch position problems procedures produce resonance response sentences social soft speak speaker speech sounds speech-language pathologist structures student stuttering talk teaching tests theory tion tongue treat treatment types understand various verbal vibrations vocal folds voice