I am the muscle that lenghtens and tenses the vocal folds, and control pitch
Bonus 100 points if you can tell me the SPECIFIC cranial nerve innervation!
What is the Cricothyroid?
Bonus: What is the Vagus Nerve, superior laryngeal nerve (CNX-SLN)?
When assessing a child with a suspected fluency disorder, what are the core SLDs to look for?
What is PWR, WWR, Blocks, and Prolongations?
What swallowing exercise/technique is used to increase the duration of UES opening?
What is Shaker method?
What is the most common phonological problem in children 18-29 months?
What is Cluster Reduction?
What is the P value that commonly determines statistical significance?
I am the primary muscle of inhalation (bonus 300 pts for innervation!)
What is Diaphragm? (Phrenic nerves- C3,4,5)
What is a direct instrumental assessment tool that provides a dynamic view of velopharyngeal movements?
What is Nasopharyngoscopy?
What articulation and phonology treatment technique is used to gain the most generalization by contrasting sounds of different place, manner, and voicing?
What is Maximal-Opposition Approach?
I am a fluent aphasia with deficits in comprehension and repetition.
What is Wernicke's Aphasia?
Location of Broca's Area
What is the Posterior Inferior Frontal Gyrus?
Where is the major relay system for sensory information?
What is Thalamus?
This dysarthria is associated with cerebellar damage?
What is ataxic dysarthria?
The joint committee on infant hearing says the newborn hearing screening must be complete by ____, and if failed, an evaluation must be complete by ____, and if necessary, early intervention must begin by ____.
What is 1-3-6 months?
A child says "wabbit" for "rabbit," this phonological process is called:
What is gliding?
This law ensures services for students with disabilities in schools?
What is IDEA?
Infants with cleft lip and/or palate are more susceptible to middle ear disease because of common impairment to which muscle?
What is Tensor Veli Palatini?
These are early signs of ASD (name 3).
What is missing early language milestones, sensory processing differences, limited engagment and eye contact, limited babbling, unusal/restricted interests, resistance to change.
The time when a typically developing child comprehends 2400 words and produces 200-600 words, answers simple WH Qs, average MLU of 2.0-4.0.
What is 30 months (24-36 mo).
I am spastic dysarthria. Tell me lesion location, primary characteristics, and atleast 2 deficits related to articulation/prosody/phonation/resonance.
What is
location: UMN lesions (bilaterally)
primary characteristics: spasticity and weakness
deficits: imprecise consonants, distorted vowels, excess/equal stress, slow rate, short phrases, hyperadduction of VFs, continuous breathy voice, harshness, low pitch, strain/strangled quality, hypernasality
This type of symbol on an AAC device has no visual relationship to its meaning (ex: written word)
What is arbitrary symbol
What are the FOUR depressors of the larynx?
3/4 correct- 400 points, other team can score up to 100 points for saying the remaining muscle.
Thyrohyoid, omiohyoid, sternohyoid, sternothyroid
The type of assessment that compares a group against a peer group.
What is norm-referenced assessments
The fluency shaping techniques (name 5/5 for full points, or atleast 3/5 for 400 pts).
What is: Slowed rate, Easy onset phonation, Light articulatory contacts, Continuous phonation/ cursive speaking, Airflow management
The DSM-5 criteria for ASD includes what
What is persistent deficits in social communication and interaction and restrictive, repetitive interests or activities. Does not include expressive language.
This is the stage of Browns Morphemes in which children develop irregular past tense? bonus (100 pts): typical age
What is stage 3?
Bonus: 31-34 months