What is the term for substituting one sound for another (e.g., 'wabbit' for 'rabbit')?
What is gliding?
This is the part of the brain responsible for language production?
What is Broca's Area?
The animated fish famously says "Just keep swimming" but could benefit from speech therapy for short-term memory issues. (Name of character and name of the movie)
Who is Dory from Finding Nemo?
This disorder, often diagnosed in childhood, involves difficulty with fluent speech, including repetitions and blocks.
What is stuttering?
What is the mascot of D'Youville University?
This type of speech error involves omitting a sound in a word, such as saying 'nake' instead of 'snake.
What is deletion?
This flap of cartilage prevents food and liquid from entering the trachea during swallowing.
What is the epiglottis?
The D'Youville Campus is just minutes away from this famous waterfall?
What is Niagara Falls?
By 6 months, infants demonstrate this important receptive language skill by responding to their name.
What is name recognition?
What is the name of the room we are in today?
What is the Clinical Skills Lab?
This approach focuses on teaching clients to contrast sounds to emphasize the differences between them.
What is minimal pairs therapy?
This is the name of the primary muscle responsible for breathing.
What is the diaphragm?
This TV scientist and character from The Big Bang Theory has trouble with social communication, a common SLP focus.
Who is Sheldon Cooper?
By this age, children can typically combine two words, like 'want cookie.
What is 18 to 24 months?
What are the full names of your professors here today (with their title)?
When a child substitutes a stop consonant for a fricative, as in 'toup' for 'soup,' this process is called what?
What is stopping?
The cranial nerve most involved in speech and swallowing, also known as CN X.
What is the vagus nerve?
The singer underwent vocal surgery in 20111, bringing attention to vocal cord disorders?
Who is Adele?
The age when a child says their first word?
What is 12 months/1 years old?
This state of the art facility on campus houses health-sciences programs, including the SLP Program?
What is the Health Professions Hub?
Name the disorder characterized by difficulty planning and coordinating the movements needed for speech.
What is childhood apraxia of speech?
This structure, located in the inner ear, is responsible for converting sound vibrations into electrical signals for the brain.
What is the cochlea?
Who is Patrick Mahomes?
This is the term for when babies start to recognize and respond to familiar voices or sounds by 3-4 months.
What is auditory discrimination?
What is the name of the building where most SLP classes are held?
What is School of Arts, Science and Education? or What is SASE?