Everything Fluency....
Motor Speech
WHERE'S MY VOICE?!
OMG, I CAN'T EAT!
GIMME THE CREDIT!!!
100

It's the speech behavior that disrupts the
fluent forward flow of speech, such as a pause,
interjection or revision.

What is a disfluency?

100

Impairment of speech production caused by defects of the neuromuscular system, the motor system, or both.

What is a motor speech disorder?

100

It's when the vocal cords are closed

What is adduction?

100
It's the term used to describe the inability to swallow

What is dysphagia?

100

It's a popular film that depicts a famous person in history who suffered from Stuttering

What is The King's Speech?

200

These are the CORE FEATURES of fluency disorders.

What are speech disfluencies?

200

These are the 4 systems of speech production

What is respiratory, phonatory, resonatory and articulatory? 

200

The total loss or lack of voice

What is aphonia?

200
These are the 4 phases of normal swallow?

What is oral prep, oral phase, pharyngeal and esophageal phase? 

200

"He went to the ssssssssssssssstore" is an example of....

What is a sound prolongation? 

300

This is the classification of fluency disorders

What are acquired, developmental and clustering disorders? 

300

This is an impairment of motor planning and programming that involves the inability to
transform a linguistic representation into the appropriate coordinated movements of the articulators

What is Acquired Apraxia of Speech?

300

Its the most common voice disorder in children? 

What are vocal nodules?

300

This is when food or liquid ENTERS the larynx

What is penetration?

300

This type of dysarhtria is known for its "Drunken-like" speech

What is ataxic dysarthria? 

400

These are disfluencies mostly related to VERBAL behaviors.

What are blocks, interjections, repetitions, prolongations, revision, broken words and circumlocution?

400

This is a group of speech disorders caused by disturbances of neuromuscular control of the speech production systems. Problem in EXECUTION of speech movements

What is dysarhtria?

400

Production of voice WITHOUT a larynx

What is alaryngeal communication?

400

This is when the food/liquid passes the larynx and into the lungs

What is aspiration?

400

This is what happens when food/liquid is aspirated

What is asphyxiation and/or pneumonia?
500

Consist of eye blinking, fear of speaking and avoidance 

What are non-verbal behaviors? 

500

THE most important mechanism for speech production in charge of production of airflow

What is Respiratory/pulmonary mechanism?

500
These is the classification of voice disorders?

What is vocal abuse, neurogenic disorders, psychogenic disorders and alaryngeal speech?

500

This is a child’s persistent failure to eat adequately for a period of at least 1 month

What is a feeding disorder?

500

This is the name of ONE of the swallow studies that can be completed to evaluate dysphagia.

What is an MBSS or a FEES?