| Literature DB >> 12858839 |
Barbara Bernhardt1, Bryan Gick, Penelope Bacsfalvi, Julie Ashdown.
Abstract
Four adolescents with moderate to severe sensorineural hearing losses and moderately unintelligible speech participated in a 14-week speech therapy study using two dynamic visual feedback technologies, electropalatography and ultrasound imaging. Electropalatography provides information about tongue-hard palate contact points. Ultrasound displays images of tongue shape and movement in two dimensions from the tip to the root. Treatment targets for all participants included a sibilant place contrast (/s/ versus /[symbol: see text]/), liquids /l/ and /[symbol: see text]/, and the tense-lax vowel contrast with the high vowels. Trained listener evaluations of pre- and post-treatment transcripts are reported in this paper. Significant improvements in speech production were noted across students and targets. Treatment targets improved significantly more than non-treatment test targets overall. Students showed greatest gains on consonants that were absent or marginal in their speech pre-treatment. No particular advantage of one technology over the other was evident in this sample.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2003 PMID: 12858839 DOI: 10.1080/0269920031000071451
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Linguist Phon ISSN: 0269-9206 Impact factor: 1.346