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Handbook on Children's Speech: Development, Disorders, and Variations 2024 [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 400 pages, height x width: 254x178 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 13-Nov-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Plural Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1635506204
  • ISBN-13: 9781635506204
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 145,75 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 400 pages, height x width: 254x178 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 13-Nov-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Plural Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1635506204
  • ISBN-13: 9781635506204
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Written by renowned basic and clinical scientist, Raymond D. Kent, the Handbook on Children's Speech: Development, Disorders, and Variations provides comprehensive and systematic coverage of the topic of how speech develops and how it can be disordered or otherwise, a departure from typical patterns of a mainstream dialect. The book emphasizes relevant biology and psychology of speech development; contemporary models of spoken language; typical speech development; bilingualism and dialect; motor learning and motor control; clinical assessments of articulation, phonology, voice, prosody, and intelligibility; populations in which speech disorders and differences often occur; and methods and strategies for prevention and treatment.

The Handbook covers both speech development and pediatric speech disorders focusing on the ages of birth to puberty. Because speech disorders in children occur against a complex developmental background, the understanding of these disorders requires knowledge about how speech develops and how it is affected in children with disorders or with exposure to languages other than American English. A major theme of the book is that speech development is a constructive, goal-directed phenomenon that weaves together several different processes having their own individual trajectories that generally reach maturity only in puberty or adolescence.

For clinicians, researchers, and students, this book will serve as a valuable compendium of the many different tools and methods that have been developed to study speech development in diverse populations and to assess and treat speech disorders and variations.
Preface
Acknowledgments

Chapter
1. Introduction

Chapter
2. Biological and Psychological Foundations of Speech Development

Chapter
3. Systems and Processes in Spoken and Inner Language

Chapter
4. Typical Speech Development

Chapter
5. Assessment of Articulation and Sensorimotor Functions

Chapter
6. Assessment of Voice and Prosody

Chapter
7. Assessment of Phonology

Chapter
8. Assessment of Intelligibility, Comprehensibility, and Other Global
Features

Chapter
9. Principles of Motor Development and Motor Learning of Speech

Chapter
10. Bilingualism and Dialects

Chapter
11. Clinical Populations and Conditions

Chapter
12. Prevention, Treatment, and Clinical Decision Making

Appendix A. International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA)
Appendix B. Variations of the Oral Mechanism Examination
Appendix C. Cranial Nerve Summary
References
Index
Raymond D. Kent, PhD, is Professor Emeritus of Communicative Sciences and Disorders at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His publications include more than 250 journal articles, book chapters, and reviews on various topics in speech science and speech pathology. He has authored or edited 18 books, including: Clinical Phonetics (with L. D. Shriberg), Intelligibility in Speech Disorders, The Acoustic Analysis of Speech (with C. Read), Reference Manual for Communicative Sciences and Disorders: Speech-Language Pathology, The Speech Sciences, Handbook of Voice Quality Measurement (with M. J. Ball), and The MIT Encyclopedia of Communication Disorders. He served as editor of the Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, associate founding editor of Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics, and associate editor of Folia Phoniatrica et Logopaedica. His awards include: Honors of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association; Docteur Honoris Causa from the Universite de Montreal; Honorary Professor, The University of Queensland, Australia; Visiting Erskine Fellow, University of Canterbury, New Zealand; and an Honorary Doctorate from the University of Oulu, Finland.