Term
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Definition
both articulation and phonological disorders affect speech intelligibility
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Term
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Definition
is a judgement made by clinician based on how much of an utterance can be understood.
it's a subjective and perceptual judgement
is percentage of words understood
phonological disorders may have greater impact on intelligibility vs. pure articulation disorders as child may confuse several phonological rules. |
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Term
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Definition
a lisp is a functional speech disorder(difficulty learning to make a specific speech sound, or a few specific sounds).
- the tongue protrudes betweeen front teeth
- airflow is directed forward
- ex: /s/ and /z/ soudn like "th"
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Term
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Definition
typically developing children may have iterdental lisp until 41/2 yrs
- If persist SLP assessment
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Term
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Definition
NOT found in typical speech development.
- tongue position close to normal position for /l/
- airflow over the sides
- AKA "slushy ess/slushy lisp"
- sounds WET or SPITTY
- SLP assessment
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Term
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Definition
some children produce sounds interdentally
tongue protrusion forward/anterior placement
[s,z,ʃ,ʒ,t͡ʃ,d͡ʒ] also[n,l]
in some everything seems INTERDENTAL, may indicated nasal obstruction due to allergy, infection, large adnoids, craniofacial anomalies, mouth breathing,tongue trust, sucking habits |
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Term
CAS Childhood Apraxia
of
Speech |
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Definition
GENERAL FEATURES:
- known/unknown origin
- underlying neurological impairment
- higer in males
- 1-2 children per 1000
- DEVELOPMENTAL
- lacks SEQUENTIAL volitional contral of oral mechanism
- difficulty w/pusposeful voluntary movements in ABSENCE of paralysis
- AKA (DAS)developmental apraxia of speech/DVD developmental apraxia dyspraxia
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Term
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Definition
Planned Movement
nuerological process by which cognition directs motor action.
ability to formulate or plan differ actions before actual motor execution
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Term
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Definition
LACK OF PRAXIS
lack of planned movement
ability to formulate/plan differ actions prior to actual motor execution |
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Term
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Definition
A disruption in MOTOR PLANNING
and or PROGRAMMING |
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Term
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Definition
execution of a motor plan is the result of praxis
PLANNING and PROGRAMMING occur prior to execution of movement.
during execution plans/programs are transformed in movements.
planning is: how the articulators transition from one POSTURE to the next.
each speech sound has a CORE MOTOR PLAN w/number of motor GOALS.
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Term
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Definition
motor goals can be found in the SPATIAL (place and manner of articulation) and TEMPORAL(timing) specifications of movements for speech sound production |
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Term
(CAS) Childhood Apraxia Of Speech |
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Definition
- no agreement on characteristics/features to be presented for a valid CAS diagnosis
- due to features vary across children /ages and may be present w/other speech disorders.
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Term
ASHA'S definition of CAS
Childhood Apraxia of Speech |
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Definition
is a neurological childhodd speech sound disorder in which the percision and consistency of movements, underlying speech are impaired in teh absence of neurmuscular deficits.
CAS may occur a result of neurological impairment, in association with complex neurobehavioral disorders of known or unknown origin
as a idiopathic neurogenci speech sound disorder
impairment in planning adn /or programming spatiotemporal parameters of movement sequences results in errors in speech sound production |
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Term
DIFFERENCE between AOS and CAS
Maassen 2002 |
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Definition
In CAS a specific underlying speech motor impairment has an impact on the development of higher PHONOLOGICAL and LINGUSITIC processing levels. |
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Term
CAS
Childhood Apraxia of Speech |
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Definition
CAS falls within the professional responsibiltiy to refer to otehr professionals: neurologist,OTs,PTs for associated nonspeech issues.
overdiagnosis: due to inconsistency/variability errors
label should be used w/caution
difficult to describe speech characteristics from developmental phonological disorders
ONSET: early and extends to adulthood
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Term
SEGMENTAL/SUPRASEGMENTAL
FEATURES associated w/CAS |
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Definition
- inconsistant errors on consonants and vowels in repeated productions of syllables or words(fit,vit,pit)
- Lengthened and disrupted coarticulatory transitions between sounds and syllables: slow,broken or difficult to acheive
- inappropriate PROSODY, especially on STRESS
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Term
KEY FEATURES OF
CAS in young children |
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Definition
- child may have no words, few words unlikely to attempt more than handful of 2 word combinations
- struggle to talk
- trial and error attempts
- frustration
- some use self taught signs/gestures
- use mime/gesture to communicate w/sound effects
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Term
CAS Speech and Non Speech
Characteristics
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Definition
Speech
limited phonetic inventory
frequent/inconsistant errors on vowels/consonants
varying supra-segmental features
increase error on longer/more complex utterances
inconsistent soudn errors when same word
is repeated
unusual articulation errors
resonance problems |
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Term
CAS sound and syllable
sequencing problems
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Definition
difficulty sequencing the sounds in syllables or words
difficulty with multisyllabic words
DDK task is difficult/slow
increase errors with increasing lenght and complexity
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Term
CAS Non-Speech
Characterisics |
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Definition
silent posturing errors
groping errors
searching behaviors |
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Term
Other problems associated with CAS |
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Definition
slow progress
fine and gross motor incoordination
Receptive language is much better than Expressive language
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Term
Bowen 2005 Characteristic of CAS |
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Definition
word in general are not clearly spoken, exceptions such as "no"
speech errors affect VOWELS/CONSONANTS,
inconsistency is evident
sounds that are used in some words are omitted from other words
when asked to imitate speech sounds, sound effects or words, the child doesn't seem to know where to start
unusual intonation, pausing and stress patterns
may not know where to put nasal resonance
receptive is better than expressive |
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Term
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Definition
Traditional assessment includes:
case history
hearing
developmentally appropriate expressive/receptive language measurement language sample
OME
DDK
single word articulation test
formal or informalphonological analysis: syllable and word shapes
phonetic inventory:isolation/stimulability
vowel/diphthong inventory: isolation and syllables
prosodic analysis
assess inconsistency of production:repeated trials
volitional non-speech movements of oral muscles |
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Term
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Definition
- speech production tasks graded forom simple to more complex
- the effect of context on speech accuracy
- observation of performance on repeated productions of the same target
- documentation of differences between elicited or imitated productions vs. volitional and spontaneous
- analysis of types of errors, omissions,distortion and subsitutions
- observation of prosody
- observations of nonspeech movement sequencing(bite, blow)
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