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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
291

Bilingual Narrative Assessment: Exploring Similarities and Differences within Languages and Across Measures

Bias, Lydia J. 18 May 2022 (has links)
No description available.
292

Measuring Speech Perception in Children With Speech Sound Disorders Using the Wide Range Acoustic Accuracy Scale

Garner, Briel Francis 16 June 2021 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to measure the speech perception of children with speech sound disorders and compare it to that of adults and typically developing children. A secondary purpose was to determine if an adaptive-tracking tool, the Wide Range Acoustic Accuracy Scale (WRAAS) equalized task demands across participants independent of perceptual ability. The participants included 31 adults, 15 typically developing children, and 15 children with speech sound disorders. Children with speech sound disorders all had difficulty producing /r/ correctly. Each participant completed perceptual testing discriminating differences in three syllable contrast pairs: /bɑ/-/wɑ/, /dɑ/-/gɑ/, and /rɑ/-/wɑ/. Results indicated that children with speech sound disorders had significantly poorer perception than the adults for /bɑ/-/wɑ/ and /dɑ/-/gɑ/ and significantly poorer perception than their typically developing peers for the /rɑ/-/wɑ/ contrast. Adults and typically developing children did not differ in their perception of any contrast. Results also indicated that WRAAS equalized the number of trials across all participants irrespective of perceptual ability. We discuss clinical implications of these results and how WRAAS may be used in future research and in clinical work to efficiently and effectively determine perceptual abilities of children with speech sound disorders.
293

Eye Fixation Behaviors and Processing Time of People with Aphasia and Neurotypically Healthy Adults When Reading Short Narratives With and Without Text-To-Speech Support

Bevelhimer, Andrew 22 April 2022 (has links)
No description available.
294

Sports-Related Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Rate and Recovery Patterns In Collegiate Athletes

Thaxton, Sarah Jane 30 April 2019 (has links)
No description available.
295

Exploring speech-language pathologist knowledge and confidence around working with children with health conditions

Williamson, Lauren 02 May 2019 (has links)
No description available.
296

Exploring Cognition, Language, and Emergent Literacy in Young Children with Asthma

Cullen-Conway, Margaret Anne 22 April 2020 (has links)
No description available.
297

Dysphagia Symptoms in People with Diabetes: A Preliminary Report

Witzke, McKenzie G. 04 June 2020 (has links)
No description available.
298

Experiences and Perspectives of People with Aphasia who Engage in Disability Activism

Adams, Theresa 28 May 2021 (has links)
No description available.
299

Characterizing non-fluent aphasia in English-based Caribbean creole languages: A case study

McDonald, Ruth 11 1900 (has links)
Impairment caused by non-fluent aphasia often results in the omission and substitution of inflectional markers. Cross-linguistic work has revealed differential patterns of aphasic impairment across languages. This study aims to determine how non-fluent aphasia is manifested in English-based Caribbean creole languages, namely Jamaican Creole English (JCE) and Guyanese Creole (GC). The use of inflectional morphology is variable in English-based Caribbean creole languages. Therefore, in aphasic creole speech, it is difficult to ascertain the status of a grammatical omission as a valid creole feature or as a sign of impairment. I argue that Seymour’s et al. (1998) contrastive-noncontrastive schema can be useful for differentiating between normal and disordered creole features. The data in this study was obtained from a creole speaker with aphasic impairments. The data was later transcribed and analyzed. The results of this study appear to suggest that grammatical markers may form a hierarchy of susceptibility to aphasic impairment. Tense, agreement and aspectual markers along with auxiliaries and copulas appear to be more susceptible to impairment in disordered creole speech than plural markers, personal and demonstrative pronouns and articles. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc) / Non-fluent aphasia is a language disorder caused by stroke and other types of severe brain trauma. This disorder can affect an individual's ability to produce grammatical words and suffixes in different ways depending on the language that they speak. This study seeks to determine how non-fluent aphasia affects English-based Caribbean creole languages, namely Jamaican Creole English (JCE) and Guyanese Creole (GC). Grammatical suffixes are optional in English-based Caribbean creole languages; therefore, it is difficult to determine whether or not an omitted grammatical suffix is a valid creole feature or a sign of impairment. I argue that Seymour’s et al. (1998) contrastive-noncontrastive schema can be useful for differentiating between normal and disordered creole features. The data in this study was obtained from a creole speaker with aphasic impairments. The data was later transcribed and analyzed. The results of this study appear to suggest that certain grammatical markers are more prone error than others in aphasic creole speech. Markers that carry tense, agreement and aspectual information along with auxiliaries and copulas appear to be more susceptible to impairment than plural markers, personal and demonstrative pronouns and articles.
300

An evaluation of a lecture series conducted to help parents alleviate and prevent speech problems through a mental hygiene approach to normal speech development

Vallier, Fred James, Jr. 01 January 1961 (has links)
The thesis is an account of a lecture series to help parents alleviate and prevent speech problems through a mental hygiene approach to normal speech development.

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