Motor Speech Disorders: Substrates, Differential Diagnosis, and ManagementWith expanded and updated information including current techniques, approaches, and case studies, the 2nd edition of this bestselling book continues its reputation as a dependable and outstanding evidence-based source on acquired motor speech disorders in adults. It covers the substrates of motor speech and its disorders, the disorders and their diagnoses, and management -- focusing on integrating what is known about the bases of motor speech disorders with the realities of clinical practice to ensure readers have the key content they need to be effective practitioners.
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From inside the book
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Page 157
... stress patterns . Murry tested the ability of five individuals with spastic dysarthria to vary stress during multiple pro- ductions of three - word sentences in which stress was placed on varying words . Peak intraoral pressure ...
... stress patterns . Murry tested the ability of five individuals with spastic dysarthria to vary stress during multiple pro- ductions of three - word sentences in which stress was placed on varying words . Peak intraoral pressure ...
Page 385
... Stress and Stress Reactions Stress is a state of bodily or mental tension resulting from factors that alter equilibrium . It is a normal part of life that can invigorate our sense of well - being and accomplishment . Stress comes from ...
... Stress and Stress Reactions Stress is a state of bodily or mental tension resulting from factors that alter equilibrium . It is a normal part of life that can invigorate our sense of well - being and accomplishment . Stress comes from ...
Page 484
... stress tasks . These can use scripted responses in which segmental information does not vary , but stress patterns do ( stress patterns mark the prominence of syllables or words within an utterance ) . For example , the core response ...
... stress tasks . These can use scripted responses in which segmental information does not vary , but stress patterns do ( stress patterns mark the prominence of syllables or words within an utterance ) . For example , the core response ...
Contents
Defining Understanding and Categorizing Motor Speech Disorders | 5 |
Neurologic Bases of Motor Speech and Its Pathologies | 17 |
Examination of Motor Speech Disorders | 69 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
abnormalities acoustic activation pathway aphasia apraxia apraxia of speech apraxic aprosodia articulation articulatory associated ataxic dysarthria basal ganglia behavioral bilateral brain brainstem cerebellar cerebellum cerebral clinical clinician cognitive cortex cortical cranial nerve deficits degenerative deviant speech diagnosis dysarthria types dysfluencies dysphagia dysphonia dystonia editors effects etiology facial flaccid dysarthria function hemisphere hyperkinetic hypokinetic dysarthria impairment improve intelligibility laryngeal lesions lingual loudness ment mixed dysarthrias motor neuron motor speech disorders MSDs muscle mutism myoclonus neurogenic neurologic disease nonspeech normal occur onset oral mechanism palilalia Parkinson's disease patients perceptual phonation phonatory physiologic problem prosodic psychogenic reduced reflexes respiratory sclerosis sensory slow spasmodic dysphonia spastic spastic dysarthria Speech AMRS speech characteristics speech disorders Speech Hear Res speech pathology Speech-Lang Pathol spinal stress stroke studies stuttering syllable syndrome therapy tion tongue treatment unilateral UUMN dysarthria variability velopharyngeal vocal fold voice disorders voice tremor vowel weakness Yorkston KM