Publisher: University of Groningen Publication date: 2012 Number of pages: 269 ISBN: 978-90-367-5541-2 Agrammatic aphasia is a complex of language problems that occurs after damage of the language areas of the brain’s left hemisphere. The areas usually are or include Broca’s area (Brodmann Areas 44 and 45). Generally, agrammatic speakers have problems with grammatical features...
1 edition. — Wiley-Blackwell, 2011. — 712 p. — (Blackwell Handbooks in Linguistics). The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics brings together an international team of contributors to create an original, in-depth survey of the field for students and practitioners of speech-language pathology, linguistics, psychology, and education. Explores the field of clinical linguistics: the...
Routledge, 2021. — 564 p. — ISBN: 978-0-367-33628-8. This comprehensive collection equips readers with a state-of-the-art description of clinical phonetics and a practical guide on how to employ phonetic techniques in disordered speech analysis. Divided into four sections, the manual covers the foundations of phonetics, sociophonetic variation and its clinical application,...
Arnold, 2003. — 338 p. Linguistics for Clinicians provides an introduction to linguistic analysis in the clinical context. The book draws on a range of linguistic theories and descriptions, equipping readers with a conceptual toolkit that will enable them to: analyze data systematically, taking into account different types of linguistic properties; pick out significant patterns...
Springer, 2022. — 137 p. This book presents a journey into how language is put together for speaking and understanding and how it can come apart when there is injury to the brain. The goal is to provide a window into language and the brain through the lens of aphasia, a speech and language disorder resulting from brain injury in adults. This book answers the question of how the...
Oxford University Press, 2015. — 305 p. — ISBN10: 0199811938, ISBN13: 978-0199811939. This book focuses on two fundamental aspects of brain-language relations: one concerns the neural organization of language in the healthy brain; the other challenges current approaches to treatment of aphasia and offers a new theory for recovery from aphasia. The essence of the book lies in...
MIT Press. 1992. — 515 p. — ISBN: 0262031892, 0262531380 This theoretical guide for speech-language pathologists, neuropsychologists, neurologists, and cognitive psychologists describes the linguistic and psycholinguistic basis of aphasias that are a result of acquired neurological disease. Caplan first outlines contemporary concepts and models in language processing and then...
Vienna: Springer, 1981. — 230 p. This volume is one in a series of monographs being issued under the general title of "Disorders of Human Communication". Each monograph deals in detail with a particular aspect of vocal communication and its disorders, and is written by internationally distinguished experts. Clinical linguistics is the application of linguistic science to the...
Edinburgh University Press, 2008. — xiv, 514 p. — ISBN: 978-0-7486-2076-0; ISBN: 978-0-7486-2077-7. The Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists estimates that 2.5 million people in the UK have a communication disorder. Of this number, some 800,000 people have a disorder that is so severe that it is hard for anyone outside their immediate families to understand them. In...
Pearson Education, 2014. — 429 p. — (The Allyn & Bacon Communication Sciences and Disorders Series). — ISBN978-0132614351. In Aphasia and Related Cognitive-Communication Disorders, renowned author Albyn Davis gives graduate students and others pursuing a clinical career in adult language disorders, a comprehensive, up-to-date look at theory and practice in a balanced treatment...
Whurr Publishers Ltd. 1996. — 206 p. — ISBN: 1861560001 This volume reflects the problems of constructing theory of how the normal brain deals with language from data from impaired individuals from the perspective of a range of disciplines: psycholinguistics, linguistics, neurophysiology and speech-language pathology. The chapters include critiques of methodology; application...
John Benjamins, 2002. — xxiv, 353 p. — (Current Issues in Linguistic Theory). — ISBN: 90-272-4735-8 / 1 58811 223 3. This book covers different aspects of speech and language pathology and it offers a fairly comprehensive overview of the complexity and the emerging importance of the field, by identifying and re-examining, from different perspectives, a number of standard...
Berlin: Language Science Press, 2022. — iv, 539 p. — (Textbooks in Language Sciences 11). — ISBN: 978-3-96110-400-0. A Linguística Clínica reúne profissionais, investigadores e estudantes de diferentes graus académicos cujo foco de trabalho é a exploração da ponte entre a Linguística e a Fonoaudiologia (na tradição brasileira) ou a Terapia da Fala (na tradição portuguesa). Tem...
Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2011. — 140 p. An important development in linguistic models is the shift from construction-oriented rules to elementary computations that generate complex grammatical expressions. In this monograph, we present a systematic linguistic examination of an Italian aphasic speaker focusing on locality conditions as configurational restrictions on...
Oxford University Press, 2003. — 326 p. — ISBN: 0195129539. How do people with brain damage communicate? How does the partial or total loss of the ability to speak and use language fluently manifest itself in actual conversation? How are people with brain damage able to expand their cognitive ability through interaction with others - and how do these discursive activities in...
Psychology Press, 2005. — 336 p. This book reports recent research on mechanisms of normal formulation and control in speaking and in language disorders such as stuttering, aphasia and verbal dyspraxia. The theoretical claim is that such disorders result from both deficits in a component of the language production system and interactions between this component and the system...
John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2021. — 331 p. — (Constructional Approaches to Language 31). Aphasia is the most common acquired language disorder in adults, resulting from brain damage, usually stroke. This book first explains how aphasia research and clinical practice remain heavily influenced by rule-based, generative theory, and summarizes the key shortcomings of this...
John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2000. — 182 p. — (Studies in Speech Pathology and Clinical Linguistics 7). The selected contributions in this volume bring together applications of pragmatics in speech and language pathology, as well as discussions of the applicability of different theoretical strands of the study of human linguistic interaction and its cognitive bases to the...
St. Louis, MO: Elsevier Mosby, 2012. — 357 p. — ISBN: 978-0-323-07201-4. Clinical practice associated with acquired language disorders has evolved in important ways in the past 30 years as a result of advances in our understanding of the cognition of language. In 1982, the Committee on Language of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) defined language as a...
Springer, 1985. — 204 p. — (Applied Psycholinguistics and Communication Disorders). — ISBN10: 0306419750, ISBN13: 978-0306419751. This book presents the work on aphasia coming out of the Institute for Aphasia and Stroke in Norway during its 10 years of existence. Rather than reviewing previously presented work, it was my desire to give a unified analysis and discussion of our...
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