Audiology
Neuroscience
Phonetics
Anatomy
Disorders & Diagnosis
100

This part of the ear is visible from the outside and helps funnel sound waves into the ear canal. 

What is the pinna (or auricle)?

100

This lobe is responsible for hearing and language comprehension.

What is the temporal lobe?

100

This is the study of speech sounds.

What is phonetics? 

100

These tiny bones located in the middle ear work together to transmit sound vibration from the eardrum to the inner ear. 

What are ossicles? (malleus, incus, and stapes)

100

This disorder affects the fluency of speech.

What is stuttering?

200

Describe the difference between Deaf and deaf.

What is, deaf (lowercase) refers to the medical condition of having a hearing loss, while Deaf (uppercase) refers to someone who identifies with Deaf culture and the Deaf community

200

This brain area is important for speech production.

Broca's Area

200

This symbol /𝜽/ represents this sound

What is ‘th’ in think

200

Located in the larynx, these paired structures vibrate to produce voiced sounds.

What are the vocal folds (or true vocal cords)?

200

 A speech sound disorder caused by difficulty planning motor movements.

What is apraxia of speech?

300

These devices are used for individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing.


What are hearing aids and cochlear implants? 


300

This large structure connects the two hemispheres

What is the corpus callosum?

300

Sounds made with the tongue touching the alveolar ridge are called

What is alveolar?

300

This leaf-shaped structure, located above the larynx, folds downward during swallowing to prevent food or liquid from entering the airway.

What is the epiglottis?

300

This language disorder often follows a stroke

What is Aphasia 

400

Name the graph that visualizes a person's hearing test results, showing the softest sounds they can hear at different frequencies?

What is an audiogram?

400

This part of the brain coordinates muscle movements.

What is the cerebellum?

400

The difference between /p/ and /b/ is this feature

What is voicing?

400

Located in the neck, this bone supports the tongue and larynx and is the only bone in the body that does not attach to another bone.

What is the hyoid bone?

400

This disorder is seen in a 3-year-old who uses fewer than 50 words, speaks in short phrases, and struggles to follow simple instructions compared to peers.

What is a language delay?

500

Name the three types of hearing loss.

What is Sensorineural, Conductive, and Mixed? 


500

This cranial nerve is responsible for controlling the muscles of the larynx, pharynx, and soft palate.

What is the vagus nerve (Cranial Nerve X)?

500

The sound /ʃ/ is produced in which manner

What is a fricative?

500

These are the muscles within a structure that are responsible for fine motor control.

What are intrinsic muscles?

500

This disorder involves difficulty swallowing.

What is dysphagia?

M
e
n
u