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E-grāmata: Handbook of Clinical Linguistics

Edited by (University of Louisiana, Lafayette, USA), Edited by (University of Sheffield, UK), Edited by (University of Louisiana, Lafayette, USA), Edited by (University of Sheffield, UK)
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Sixty-two leading clinical linguists and phoneticians from around the world contribute 38 chapters covering the main areas of research in the application of linguistic science to the study of communication disability in the clinical setting. The material is organized according to different areas of linguistics rather than to different types of communication disorder: discourse, pragmatics and sociolinguistics; syntax and semantics; and phonetics and phonology. The text includes discussion of a range of pathologies, both developmental and acquired, in each chapter, and commentary by individual authors on the actual or potential influence of their specialist areas on mainstream theories and descriptions of language. For students, instructors, researchers, and practitioners of speech-language pathology, linguistics, psychology, and education. Annotation ©2008 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics is an original, in-depth survey of the field for students and practitioners of speech-language pathology, linguistics, psychology, and education.

  • Brings together an international team of contributors to create an original and in-depth survey of this multi-faceted field
  • Explores the field of clinical linguistics: the application of the principles and methods of linguistics to the study of language disability in all its forms
  • Fills a gap in the existing literature, creating the first non-encyclopedic volume to explore this ever-expanding area of linguistic concern and research
  • Includes a range of pathologies, with each section exploring multilingual and cross-linguistics aspects of the field, as well as analytical methods and assessment
  • Describes how mainstream theories and descriptions of language have been influenced by clinical research.

Recenzijas

"This collection performs a rite of passage: clinical linguistics has come of age." David Crystal, University of Wales, Bangor





"The range of topics represented here, and the quality of the contributions, underline the advances Clinical Linguistics has made in three decades. This volume will for some time be the benchmark against which others in the field will be evaluated." Paul Fletcher, University College Cork









"This comprehensive compendium covers the breadth and depth of clinical linguistics, presenting the latest research on pragmatics, discourse, sociolinguistics, syntax, semantics, phonetics and phonology. The impressive cohort of international contributors comprises the foremost authorities in their fields. This book is a classic reference work and will be frequently cited." Sharynne McLeod, Charles Sturt University, Australia









"This Handbook offers state-of-the-art reviews and cutting-edge research reports. It is strongly recommended as a textbook for students at the master's level and higher, instructors and researchers in a variety of disciplines, including Speech-Language Pathology, Clinical Linguistics, Medicine, and Psychology." Ben Maassen, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre

List of Figures
viii
Notes on Contributors x
Introduction xxiii
Martin J. Ball
Michael R. Perkins
Nicole Muller
Sara Howard
Part I Pragmatics, Discourse, and Sociolinguistics
1(162)
Discourse Analysis and Communication Impairment
3(29)
Nicole Muller
Jacqueline A. Guendouzi
Brent Wilson
Conversational Implicature and Communication Impairment
32(17)
Elisabeth Ahlsen
Relevance Theory and Communication Disorders
49(12)
Eeva Leinonen
Nuala Ryder
Neuropragmatics
61(18)
Brigitte Stemmer
Pragmatic Impairment as an Emergent Phenomenon
79(13)
Michael R. Perkins
Conversation Analysis and Communication Disorders
92(15)
Ray Wilkinson
Clinical Sociolinguistics
107(23)
Jack S. Damico
Martin J. Ball
Systemic Functional Linguistics and Communication Impairment
130(16)
Alison Ferguson
Julie Thomson
Cross-Linguistic and Multilingual Perspectives on Communicative Competence and Communication Impairment: Pragmatics, Discourse, and Sociolinguistics
146(17)
Zhu Hua
Li Wei
Part II Syntax and Semantics
163(146)
Chomskyan Syntactic Theory and Language Disorder
165(19)
Harald Clahsen
Formulaic Sequences and Language Disorder
184(14)
Alison Wray
Syntactic Processing in Developmental and Acquired Language Disorders
198(14)
Theodoros Marinis
Morphology and Language Disorder
212(16)
Martina Penke
Normal and Pathological Semantic Processing of Words
228(17)
Karima Kahlaoui
Yves Joanette
Neural Correlates of Normal and Pathological Language Processing
245(16)
Stefan Frisch
Sonja A. Kotz
Angela D. Friederici
Bilingualism and Language Impairment
261(14)
Jan de Jong
Cross-Linguistic Perspectives on the Syntax and Semantics of Language Disorders
275(15)
Martha Crago
Johanne Paradis
Lise Menn
Interfaces between Cognition, Semantics, and Syntax
290(19)
Maria Black
Shula Chiat
Part III Phonetics and Phonology
309(332)
Instrumental Analysis of Articulation in Speech Impairment
311(21)
Fiona E. Gibbon
Instrumental Analysis of Resonance in Speech Impairment
332(12)
Tara L. Whitehill
Alice S.-Y. Lee
Instrumental Analysis of Phonation
344(16)
Shaheen N. Awan
Acoustic Analysis of Speech
360(21)
Ray D. Kent
Yunjung Kim
Clinical Phonetic Transcription
381(19)
Barry Heselwood
Sara Howard
Comparisons in Perception between Speech and Nonspeech Signals
400(12)
Tessa Bent
David B. Pisoni
Phonological Analysis, Phonological Processes
412(11)
Adele W. Miccio
Shelley E. Scarpino
Constraints-Based Nonlinear Phonological Theories: Application and Implications
423(16)
Barbara M. H. Bernhardt
Joseph P. Stemberger
Optimality Theory: A Clinical Perspective
439(13)
Daniel A. Dinnsen
Judith A. Gierut
Government Phonology and Speech Impairment
452(15)
Martin J. Ball
Articulatory Phonology and Speech Impairment
467(13)
Pascal H. H. M. van Lieshout
Louis M. Goldstein
A Cognitive Approach to Clinical Phonology
480(11)
Anna Vogel Sosa
Joan L. Bybee
Neurophonetics
491(15)
Wolfram Ziegler
Coarticulation and Speech Impairment
506(19)
Bill Hardcastle
Kris Tjaden
Vowel Development and Disorder
525(24)
Carol Stoel-Gammon
Karen Pollock
Prosodic Impairments
549(19)
Bill Hardcastle
Sandra Whiteside
Speech Intelligibility
568(15)
Gary Weismer
Connected Speech
583(20)
Sara Howard
Bill Wells
John Local
Sociophonetics and Clinical Linguistics
603(23)
Gerrard Docherty
Ghada Khattab
Cross-Linguistic Phonological Acquisition
626(15)
David Ingram
Author Index 641(27)
Subject Index 668
Martin J. Ball is Hawthorne Endowed Professor and Head of the Department of Communicative Disorders at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.





Michael R. Perkins is Professor of Clinical Linguistics in the Department of Human Communication Sciences at the University of Sheffield, England.









Nicole Müller is Hawthorne-BoRSF Endowed Professor in the Department of Communicative Disorders at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.









Sara Howard is Senior Lecturer in Clinical Phonetics in the Department of Human Communication Sciences at the University of Sheffield.