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vocal fold nodules
Typically bilateral and sit opposite of each other, typically appear at the junction of the anterior and middle third portion of the folds
cluttering
Highly dysfluent, rapid, unclear and disorganized speech. Lack of personal concern or reduced awareness about problem
gestural AAC
No instruments or external aids are used; pantomime, eyeblink encoding, American Indian hand talk, ASL
Hemorrhagic stroke
Caused by bleeding in the brain due to ruptured blood vessels. Intracerebral (within brain) or extracerebral (within the meninges, resulting in subarachnoid, subdural and epidural varieties)
Diaphragm
Respiration relies on the muscles of inspiration and expiration. The thick dome shaped muscle that separates the abdomen from the thorax is called the
Diaphragm
Respiration relies on the muscles of inspiration and expiration. The thick dome shaped muscle that separates the abdomen from the thorax is called the
orbicularis oris
The primary muscle of the lips is the
efferent nerves
Also called motor nerves; nerves that carry information out of the brain and spinal cord to other areas of the body.
globus, pallidus, caudate, and putamen
The corpus striatum is composed of three nuclear masses, which are the
corpus callosum and basal ganglia
The anterior cerebral artery supplies blood to the
Aryepiglottic folds
These are composed of a ring of connective tissue and muscle extending from the tips of the arytenoid cartilages to the larynx. They separate the laryngeal vestibule from the pharynx and help preserve the airway
palatoglossus, tensor veli palatini, and levator veli palatini
Muscles that contribute to the velopharyngeal closure through tensing to elevating the velum are the
lingual frenulum
The structure at the inferior portion of the tongue that connects the tongue with the mandible is the
genioglossus
When a person is producing voiced and voiceless /th/, the muscle most involved is the
X
The cranial nerve that innervates the larynx and inneravates the levator veli palatini, palatoglossus, and palatopharyngeus muscles is
Lateral cricoarytenoids and transverse arytenoids
Which muscles from the list are most involved in adducting the vocal folds?
commissural fibers
cerebral hemispheres are connected by
reticular activating system
The central nervous systems primary mechanism of attention, alertness, and consciousness, which is also related to sleep wake cycles is the
percentral gyrus
The primary motor cortex in the frontal lobe is located on the
Coarticulation
the influence of one phoneme upon another in production and perception wherein two different articulators move simultaneously to produce two different speech sounds.
mass and elasticity
Two properties of a medium that affect sound transmission are
sinusoidal wave
a sound wave that has horizontal/vertical symmetry, one peak and one valley, single frequency and results of simple harmonic motion.
octave
an indication of the interval between two frequencies
natural frequency
a frequency with which a source of sound vibrates naturally
oscillation
Back and forth movement of air molecules because of vibrating object is known as
fundamental frequency
The lowest frequency of a periodic wave is also known as the
complex tone
When two or more sounds of differing frequencies are added the result is a
harmonics
In a periodically complex sound, tones occur over the fundamental frequency and can be characterized as a whole number multiples of the fundamental frequency are called
Bloodstein
advocated that stuttering may be caused by any belief that speech is a difficult task, resulting in tension and speech fragmentation.
Brutten and Shoemaker
proposed that stuttering is limited to part word repetitions and sound prolongations, stuttering is due to classically conditioned negative emotion, some dysfluencies are operantly conditioned
stuttering modification approach
Cancellations, pull outs, and preparatory sets are taught in:
fluency shaping techniques
Skills like managing airflow management, gentle phonatory onset, and reduced rate of speech are targets in:
Vocal adductors
posterior cricoarytenoid (PCA
Inhalation
expand the lungs pressure within compared to outside the lungs. Air moves through the open laryngeal valve and equalizes pressure inside and outside the lungs.
Myoelastic Aerodynamic Theory
Vocal folds vibrate because of the forces of pressure of air and elasticity of vocal folds: Myoelastic aerodynamic theory
Bernoulli Effect
Increased speed of air passing between vocal folds, sucking motion of the folds towards each other
Mucosal wave action
The cover and transition of the vocalis muscle slide to produce a wave, critical to phonation
Energy in vibration is modified by resonance characteristics of vocal tract
Genioglossus
Forms the bulk of the tongue and allows it move freely
peripheral nervous system
Controls cranial nerves, spinal nerves, autonomic nervous system
central nervous system
consists of the brain and spinal cord
Thalamus
Regulates sensory information and relay sensory impulses to portions of cerebral cortex
hypothalamus
Controls emotions, helps integrate actions of the ANS
basal ganglia
Recieves input from frontal lobe and relays back to higher centers of brain, part of extrapyramidal system, leiosns result in unsual body postures, dysarthria
extrapyramidal system
Transmits impulses, controls postural support for fine motor movement, indirect activation and interacts with motor system, maintains posture, regulate movement:
pyramidal system
Controls voluntary movement of speech muscles, corticobulbar, corticospinal, desscuates medullary level from right side of body that originates in left cerebral cortex:
sound waves
Made up on movements of particles, expansions/contractions:
rarefaction
Thinning of molecules when vibration returns to equilibrium:
compression
Vibratory movement of objects, increase density of air molecules:
amplitude
Magnitude or strength of a sound signal:
incidental learning
A child's ability to learn based on a few exposures:
birth to 3 months
Startle response, moves head towards voice, cries for assistance, produces vowels:
7 to 9 months
Comprehends "no", looks at common objects when named, sound combinations, general language patty cake, variegated babbling, object permanence:
4 to 6 months
Raises arms to mother, moves towards family members when named, raspberries, varies pitch vocalizations, vocalizes displeasure/pleasure, marginal babbling, varies volume:
10 to 12 months
Understands 10 words, simple 1 step directions, object permanence established, obey commands, turns head to name, consonant vowel sounds in vocal play:
Behavioral Theory
Theory that learning plays a major role in acquisition of verbal behaviors, they only learn the language they are exposed to severe social deprivation results in language deprivation; functional units of language include mands, tacts, echoics, autoclitics, intraverbals:
nativist theory
Noam Chomsky, universal rules of grammar apply to all languages, the language acquisition device (LAD) specialized language processor that is a physiological part of brain. Competence, the knowledge of rules of universal grammar is innate; performance, the actual production of language is imperfect because of fatigue and distraction:
Cognitive theory
Theory that language is only one expression of a more general set of cognitive activities and proper development of cognitive system is a necessary precursor of linguistic expression, child must acquire concepts before words; piaget proposed four stages of cognitive development:
information processing theory
Theory that language learning relies on information processing mechanisms; this view has also been called cognitive connectionism. auditory processing deals with the ability to perceive the brief acoustic events that comprise speech sounds and track changes in these events. Deals with auditory discrimination, auditory attention, auditory memory, auditory rate, auditory sequencing:
social interactionism theory
Theory that language develops because people are motivated to interact socially with others around them. Lev Vygotsky, language knowledge is acquired through social interaction with more competent and experienced members of the child's culture. Thought that children first learned language in interpersonal interactions and then used that language to structure thought:
Expansion
Clinician expands a child's telegraphic or incomplete utterance to a more grammatically complete sentence:
extension
Clinician comments on child's utterance and adds new information:
leukoplakia
Benign growths of thick, whitish patches on the surface membrane of the mucosa. Considered precancerous and must be monitored
laryngomalacia
Epiglottis soft and pliable due to abnormal development:
velopharyngeal insufficiency
Velopharyngeal mechanism is inadequate to achieve closure as a result the nasal cavities are not sealed off appropriately from oral cavity:
Granuloma
Localized inflammatory vascular lesion that is composed of granular tissue in a firm, rounded sac. Frequently develop on the vocal processes of the arytenoid cartilages in posterior laryngeal area:
subglottal stenosis
Narrowing of subglottic space, can be acquired or congenital. Occur from endotracheal intubation, the result of arrested development of the conus elasticus or interruption of the cricoid cartilage during embryological development:
Papilloma
Wart like growths caused by human papilloma virus. Pink, white or both and can be found anywhere in the airway. Voice therapy can be helpful after surgical treatment including relaxation exercises, teaching the patient to use amplification devices or help decrease subglottic hyperfunction:
laryngeal web
Membrane that grows across the anterior portion of the glottis. Can be congenital and acquired due to trauma to the inner edges of the vocal folds. Immediate surgery required, places a laryngeal keel between vocal folds to prevent them from growing back together:
Paradoxical vocal fold motion (PVFM)
Laryngeal dyskinesia, there is an inappropriate closure or adduction of the true vocal folds during inhalation, exhalation or both. Upper airway sensitivity to laryngeal irritants. Appear asthmatic; attributed to psychological and physiological causes:
GERD
gastric contents spontaneously empty into the esophagus when the person has not vomited or belched. May experience heartburn, acid indigestion, sore throat or hoarseness:
Ankylosis
Stiffening of the joints the movement of the arytenoids is restricted because of a bone joint disease such as arthritis:
Spasmodic dysphonia
Vocal laryngeal dystonia. Has neurogenic causes with possible emotional side effects. created by intermittent, involuntary, fleeting vocal fold abduction when patient tries to phonate. Loudness is reduced
Vocal fold polyps
Softer than nodules and may be filled with fluid or have vascular tissue; tend to be unilateral
Ischemic stroke
Caused by a blocked or interrupted blood flow supply to the brain; caused by either a thrombus (collection of blood material that blocks the flow of blood), or an embolus (traveling mass of arterial debris or a clump of tissue from a tumor that gets lodged in a smaller artery and thus blocks the flow of blood
gestural assisted AAC
Gestures or movements combined with instrument or display device, run by software, picsyms (graphic symbols to represent nouns, verbs), pic symbols (drawings on a black background), blissymbols (semi iconic symbols taught to speakers of linguistic and cultural background),, sig symbols (ideographic or pictographic symbols based on ASL, rebuses (pictures represent events), PECS
Neuro assisted AAC
biofeedback, use muscle action potentials for activating messages
behavioral theory
Theory that sound acquisition is based on conditioning and learning; child develops adult like speech through interactions of caregiver
Structural theory
Theory that phonological development follows innate, universal and hierarchal order of acquisition of distinctive features
Natural phonology theory
Natural phonological processes are innate processes that simplify an adult like word
class II malocclusion
Maxilla protruding, and lower jaw receded; overbite
class III malocclusion
Maxilla receded mandible is protruding
class I malocclusion
Arches are aligned, but some teeth misaligned
dysarthria
Motor speech disorder caused by CNS damage, slurred speech, can be caused by degenerative diseases, neurological diseases or strokes
dysarthria treatment
Treatment includes repetitive and structured drill, increasing muscle tone and strength while treating other factors that affect intelligibility
apraxia
Caused by CNS damage, difficulty programming and sequencing articulated speech inconsistent articulation and multiple errors, poor intelligibility
cluttering treatment
Treatment includes increasing awareness of speech problems, maintenance of fluent and articulated speech, reduced rate of speech to improve clarity and fluency
neurogenic stuttering
Fluency disorder caused by neuropathology, caused by strokes, trauma, tumors, brain surgery, dementia, drug toxicity.. etc.
thyroid cartilage
Largest laryngeal cartilage, called the Adam's apple. Prominent in men, shields laryngeal structures
arytenoid cartilage
Shaped like pyramids, most anterior angle of base of arytenoids the true vocal folds attach at vocal process
corniculate cartilage
Sit on the apex of arteynoids and are small and cone shaped
cuneiform cartailges
Tiny cone shaped cartilage pieces under mucous membrane that cover aryepiglottic folds
infrahyoid laryngeal muscles (depressors)
strong impact on pitch. Thyrohyoid, omohyoid, sternohyoid, sternothyroid
suprahyoid laryngeal muscles (elevators)
lie above hyoid bone, include digastric, geniohyoid, mylohyoids, stylohyoid, genioglossus and hyoglossus
maximum phonation time
Client's ability to hold out vowel /a/ as long as possible
mean fundamental frequencies
Pitch of voice averages
MFF men
100 to 150 Hz
MFF women
180 to 250 Hz
Presbyphonia
Age related voice disorder characterized by perceptual changes in quality, range, loudness and itch in an older speaker's voice
Jitter
Frequency perturbation, to variations in vocal frequency that are often heard in dysphonic patients; people with no laryngeal pathology are able to sustain a vowel with less than 1% jitter