The vocal tract articulators are
What is the tongue, soft palate, and lips
The muscle that maintains air within the buccal cavities
What is the buccinator
An ultrasound assesses what aspect of articulation
What is lingual movements
The motor innervation of the lips is provided by cranial nerve
What is the VII (facial) nerve
When nasal sounds are produced, the velopharyngeal port is
What is open
The cavities of the vocal tract are
What is Pharyngeal cavities (Nasopharynx, Oropharynx, Laryngopharynx), Nasal Cavities, and Oral Cavity
The mentalis muscle is known as the
What is the pouting muscle
What device measures the location and timing of the tongue's contact with the hard palate during speech
What is electropalatography
The trigeminal nerve (V) innervates the
What is the mandible
A structural disorder that impacts articulation is
What is Cleft palate and/or lip
The attachment for most part of the muscles used for articulation is
What is the maxilla
The muscle used to blow out a candle is
What is the orbicularis oris
What instrumental method maps out what speech sounds look like graphically?
What is the praat?
The intrinsic muscles of the tongue are innervated by
What is the XII (hypoglossal) cranial nerve
The 4 types of articulation disorders are referred to as
What is SODA: Substitution, Omission, Distortion, and Addition.
The pharyngeal cavities are the
What is the Nasopharynx, Oropharynx, Laryngopharynx
The “smiling” muscle is the
What is the risorius muscle
The GFTA-3 tests
What is articulation.
The motor innervation of the pharynx is provided by cranial nerves
What are X (vagus) and XI (accessory)
The source-filter theory is
What is how the oral cavity shapes speech through a voicing source is generated by vocal folds, routed through vocal tract, and then shaped into sounds of speech.
The only freely movable joint in the skull
What is the temporomandibular joint
The muscle that is the unilateral raising of the left/right upper lip is
What is the zygomatic major
Acoustic analysis of recorded speech samples provides
What is objective information about voicing, vowel and sibilant quality, epenthesis (vowel or consonant insertion), pitch, prosody, and rhythm.
The palatoglossus is innervated by the
What is X (vagus) cranial nerve
Articulation is defined as
What is bringing together 2 anatomical structures to constrict or allow airflow.