Anatomy and Physiology
Speech & Lang Development
Intro to Communication Disorders
Speech Sound Disorders
Diagnostic Methods
100

Name this structure within the ear.

What is tympanic membrane or eardrum?

100

Children only begin to realize that indirect requests are more polite than direct requests around this age

What is age five?

100

The most common form of stuttering; it begins in the

preschool years.


What is developmental stuttering?

100

The linguistic-based approaches for speech sound disorders focus on what level of stimuli as a core component of intervention?

What is words?

100

CA stands for

What is chronological age?

200

Parkinson's disease is a result of damage to this area

What is the basal ganglia?

200

The process of interpreting words with reference to the position of the speaker is called

What is deixis?

200

More than 10 disfluencies per this number of spoken words may indicate that the child has a fluency problem.


What is 50?

200

Minimal pairs target words may differ on the number of features differences between the contrasted phonemes. Which of the following word pairs differs across place-manner-and voicing?

Dee and thee

map and sap

 

What is map and sap?

200

Assesses speech production of individuals 3-0 to 8-11

What is the Photo Articulation Test-Third Edition (PAT-3)?

300

Part of the basal ganglia that is responsible for the release of the neurotransmitter dopamine

What is substantia nigra?

300

The ability to make same/different judgments seems to be related to the development of

What is conservation?

300

The perceptual correlate of fundamental frequency

associated with the rate of vocal fold vibration.


What is pitch?

300

The target words got and dot are a minimal opposition word pair. They meet the criteria because they differ by only one production feature. They differ in

What is place of articulation?

300

Presents with a lateral lisp

The clinician will indicate this as what type of disorder: articulation, phonological process, apraxia, or dysarthria

What is articulation?

400

Makes sure that body movements are smoothly coordinated and error free

What is the cerebellum?

400

Which syllabic patterns is found least in the first words of children?

What is CVC?

400

Category of dysarthria that usually results from lesions in the cranial and spinal nerves or in the muscle unit itself. May result in reduced respiratory drive for speech breathing, continuously breathy voice quality, reduced pitch and loudness levels, hypernasality, and imprecise articulation.

What is 

flaccid dysarthria?


400

The goal of the Core Vocabulary approach is

What is functional communication?
400

This is a record of relevant background information pertaining to the client’s past and present concerns.

What is a case history?

500

This circled area is known as

What is Broca's area?

500

Most extensions and overextensions of meaning seem to be based on what similarities?

What are perceptual similarities?

500

These type of voice disorders are believed to result from emotional suppression.

What are Psychogenic voice disorders?

500

Target selection for maximal oppositions is based on what approach

What is Complexity Approach?

500

Evaluates social communication in context, telling you how well students listen, choose appropriate content, express feelings, make requests, and handle other aspects of pragmatic language

What is Test of Pragmatic Language-Second Edition (TOPL-2)?

M
e
n
u