SLHS 4620 Final

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96 Terms

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detection

knowing that a sound is present

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Discrimination

ability to distinguish when two separate sounds are different

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identification

ability to label or identify the stimulus

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comprehention

full perception and understanding of the meaning of an auditory message

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Cued Speech

visual communication system; hand movements are supplemental to speechreading

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AVT

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Auditory-Oral

help children with hearing loss to communicate through speech alone

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ASL

complex visual and spatial language with its own rules of grammar, sentence, and sign formation

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Signed Exact English,

matches signs with the English language; visual form of the English language

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Total Communication

combines both oral and manual methods; uses combination of signs, speech, gestures, pictures, print, etc.

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codeswitching

person adjusts their language, syntax, grammatical structure, behavior, and/or appearance to fit into dominant culture

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hard of hearing

persons with mild, moderate, or severe hearing loss and some ability to understand speech with the use of hearing aids or amplification

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Deaf

cultural identification with the Deaf community

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deaf

profound bilateral hearing loss where even with powerful hearing aids, speech generally is not perceived in auditory-oral perceptual situations

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Deaf community

group of individuals who share cultural similarities in language, morals, traditions, and values

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enculturation process

shaping or raising children according to the values defined by a culture

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self-concept

how one sees oneself

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hearing aid effect,

psychological reaction to the presence of a hearing aid; the viewer has negative assumptions about the hearing aid user

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affective vocabulary

words and phrases that describe feelings or emotional reactions

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social competence,

skills for successful and satisfying personal relationships

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peer groups

provide safe environments for adolescents to practice important life skills, including communication, cooperate, and compromise

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paranoia

perception that others are talking about us

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avoidance techniques

strategies used to postpone acknowledgement of a difficult situation

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impulse disorder,

difficulty controlling one's initial reactions or impulses; acting without considering consequences

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non-professional audiologic counseling

helping patients "own their hearing loss" and advance to problem solving

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professional boundaries,

notable distinctions between professions as they approach common areas of concern

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psychotherapy

conducted by psychiatrists/psychologists; help patients explore unconscious behavior patterns to alter ways of relating and functioning; challenging personal history and analyzing meaning of one's responses

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self-assessments

paper-and-pencil questionnaires or surveys to help persons describe their listening problems to themselves and others

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counseling

help people develop "here-and-now" strategies for coping with life, decisions, + current problems

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professional counselors

family counselors or social workers

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informational counseling

sole purpose of conveying information

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personal adjustment counseling

less talking on professional's end; more listening to the patient

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IEP

written report describing a child's current level of performance, annual goals, and procedures to meet these goals

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IFSP

required by special education law for birth to age 3 services; identifies family and child strengths/needs/priorities; identifies outcomes for early intervention program

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504

mandates that all entities receiving federal funds must not discriminate and must offer services that provide access to their programs

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IDEA

Guarantees educational rights to children with disabilities

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LRE

Educating children with disabilities in a local public school among children without disabilities; child has most access to academic, social, and emotional support

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accommodations

How the environment is adjusted so the student can access learning

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modifications

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auditory inclination

Ways the content is altered so it is meaningful to a student

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learning trajectories

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integration

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inclusion

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attention

focusing on the speaker and message being conveyed

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CAPD

presents itself in school-age children due to increasing academic demands

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hearing conservation

teaching children how to protect their hearing from high noise levels

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reverberation

prolongation of sound data on hard surfaces

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FM

frequency modulated radio signal that carries the speaker's voice directly to a receiver

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FM advantage

amplifying a speaker's voice above background noise while not being affected by distance or direction

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sound field amplification

amplifying an entire area such as a classroom or an auditorium

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individualized transition plan,

long term plan to arrange for further education or job training after high school

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multidisciplinary approach

team of specialists from a variety of disciplines in the childcare

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auditory neuropathy,

sound information is not faithfully transmitted to the auditory nerve and brain properly

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family-centered practice,

focus on family identified needs and priorities, efforts to form partnerships with parents to address child needs, and empowerment of families as the primary decision makers for their child

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child-centered therapy

direct service for child, with limited direct involvement of the parent in intervention

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natural environments

promote the provision of services in the home or in community settings that families routinely access

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parent-professional partnerships,

family members collaborating with professionals to identify needs and implement strategies to encourage infant development

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transdisciplinary teamwork

team members collaborate and are independent

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collaborative consultation

team members contribute diverse expertise to creatively solve intervention problems

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people first-language

identification of an individual before the mention of a disability

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presbycusis

age-related hearing loss; decline in hearing thresholds and auditory processing associated with aging

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phonemic regression

speech understanding is unexpectedly poor

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self-efficacy

belief in one's capabilities to organize and execute the courses of action required to produce given attainments

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listening effort

how cognitively demanding it is to understand speech in different listening environments

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disability

overall effect of hearing loss; defined by WHO

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JCIH 2019 (1-3-6 Definition)

-Infants should have hearing screened no later than one month.

-Don't pass--> diagnose hearing loss by 3 months

-Enroll in early intervention by 6 months

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Auditory Behavior Age Ranges (Birth-3m)

Infant wakes to sudden noises, cries/ startles to sudden and loud sounds, soothed by mother's voice.

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Auditory Behavior Age Ranges (3-6m)

Turns eyes or head to search for location of sound, responds to mother's voice, babbling sounds, sound making toys, connects to environment.

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Auditory Behavior Age Ranges (6-10m)

Looks for sound source outside of vision, responds to name, understands common words; inflections in speech.

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Auditory Behavior Age Ranges (10-15m)

Sound source behind him, significant distance, imitates simple sounds, points to objects

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Auditory Behavior Age Ranges (15-18m)

Can hear + respond from another room, normal voice, first words, follow directions.

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History of Communication Modes-Auditory verbal

1978

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History of Communication Modes-Auditory Oral

1989

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History of Communication Modes-ASL

First emerged in 18th century, regarded as language in 20th century

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History of Communication Modes-Cued speech

1966

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History of Communication Modes-Signed exact speech

1972

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History of Communication Modes-Total communications

Late 1960s early 1970s

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Communication ModesAuditory verbal

-Goal= guide parents in helping child develop intelligible spoken language through listening + coach parents to advocate for child's inclusion

-Pros= residual hearing can help child develop language; language is learned through consistent meaningful interactions.

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Communication ModesAuditory oral

-Goal= use residual hearing for access to spoken language, talk using spoken language

-Pros= more options for education, vocation, and life.

-Cons= not all children will be successful, qualified therapist numbers are low, auditory functioning, language processing, learning styles

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Communication ModesASL

-Goal= convey information through handshape, location, movement, and palm orientation- facial expression and body language

-Cons= parents are often not native ASL signers, does not provide skills to acquire English grammar and literacy

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Communication Modes Cued speech

-Goals= represent spoken language visually in real time-Pros= relatively simple and easy to learn

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Communication Modes Total communication

-Goals= accommodate for the fact that there is not just one approach or method for all individuals

-Pros- families do not have to pick one mode of communication, improves quality of the relationship between child and others; psychosocial, linguistic, and academic improvements

-Cons= difficult to use signs with spoken word order, may not learn fluent sign languages, broken language

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Deaf culture percentages

-1 million people are profoundly deaf and identify as Deaf

-5% of deaf children are born to deaf parents

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Degrees of HL + affect on education

-The more severe the loss, the most difficult learning can be.

-Minimal or mild loss can put a child at risk for academic failure

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Reverberation time

Ideal time=0.3 seconds or less

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Symptoms of CAPD

Localizing sound; understanding spoken language in competing messages, longer in responding, asking to repeat; inconsistent or inappropriate response, complex auditory directions; easily distracted

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Comorbidity of CAPD

ADHD + other findings

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Percentage of school aged children

5%

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Test areas of CAPD

-Auditory discrimination

-Temporal processing

-Binaural

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Diagnostic criteria of CAPD

Two deficits in two different tests greater than 2 standard deviations from the mean

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Deficits in CAPD

listening, communication, academic success, psychosocial wellness

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What does CORE stand for?

-Communication Impairment and Activity Limitations

-Overall participation variables

-Related personal factors-Environmental factors

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What does CARE stand for?

-Counseling

-Audibility

-amplification

-Remediation for communication activities

-Environment coordination and participation

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Percentages of hearing loss in Americans

26.7 million Americans over 50 years old

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Percentage of Hearing Aids

3.8 million

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What % of people over 70 have loss in hearing and vision

20%