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1
Time to Follow Commands, Duration of Post-Traumatic Amnesia, and Total Duration of Impaired Consciousness as Predictors of Outcome Following Pediatric Traumatic Brain Injury
In: http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1587156828071613 (2020)
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2
Linguistic and Cultural Acceptability of a Spanish Translation of the Ohio State University Traumatic Brain Injury Identification Method Among Community-Dwelling Spanish-Dominant Older Adults.
In: Archives of rehabilitation research and clinical translation, vol 1, iss 3-4 (2019)
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3
Predictors of Return to Work after Multidisciplinary Rehabilitation Evaluation for Prolonged Post-Concussion Symptoms
In: Theses, Dissertations, and Student Research: Department of Psychology (2018)
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4
Military On-Line Problem Solving Intervention (MOPS-VI)
In: http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1331631831 (2012)
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5
Utilizing Art Therapy to Recognize Cognitive-Communication Disabilities in Patients with Traumatic Brain Injury
In: http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=urs1211417561 (2008)
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6
Lingual kinematics and coordination in speech-disordered children exhibiting differentiated versus undifferentiated lingual gestures
Goozee, J.; Murdoch, B.; Ozanne, A.; Cheng, Y.; Hill, A.; Gibbon, F.. - : Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2007
Abstract: Background: Electropalatographic investigations have revealed that a proportion of children with articulation/phonological disorders exhibit undifferentiated lingual gestures, whereby the whole of the tongue contacts the palate simultaneously during lingual consonant production. These undifferentiated lingual gestures have been interpreted to reflect a 'motor constraint', with the tongue tip and body incapable of operating independently. Aims: The present study aimed to provide further insight into the speech motor control abilities of children with articulation/phonological disorders by using electromagnetic articulography to track the movements (velocity, acceleration, distance, duration) of, and the coordination between, the tongue tip and tongue body during lingual consonant production. Methods & Procedures: Comparisons were made between two children with persistent articulation/phonological disorders who exhibited differentiated electropalatographic gestures (9.58 and 10 years), one child with persistent articulation/phonological disorder who demonstrated undifferentiated lingual gestures (11 years), and a group of four control children (mean age=10.98 years, standard deviation=0.48). The children were asked to read aloud single-syllable words containing word-initial /t, s, k/ consonants, with tongue tip and tongue body movements recorded using the electromagnetic articulography AG200 system (Carstens Medizinelektronik GmbH, Germany). Outcomes & Results: Kinematic analysis revealed increased kinematic values for /s/ for the two children with articulation/phonological disorders and differentiated electropalatographic gestures compared with the control group. One of these children also exhibited increased /k/ duration. Reduced acceleration was exhibited by one child with differentiated electropalatographic gestures during /t/ production, and by the child with undifferentiated lingual gestures during /k/. Regarding coordination, lag times between the tongue tip and body were variable between and within children. Spatial contribution to consonant production discriminated between the children with differentiated electropalatographic gestures and undifferentiated lingual gestures, with excessive movement of the tongue body exhibited for alveolar consonants by the child with undifferentiated lingual gestures. Conclusions: All three of the children with articulation/phonological disorders demonstrated aberrant lingual kinematics. The child who exhibited undifferentiated lingual gestures further exhibited excess tongue body movement during alveolar consonants, suggestive of poor motor control, an immature or deviant bracing system, and/or a compensatory mechanism to counteract potential disturbances in tongue tip fine motor control. Electromagnetic articulography provided a means of examining speech motor control deficits, including disturbances in tongue movement and coordination, in children with articulation/phonological disorders.
Keyword: 321025 Rehabilitation and Therapy - Hearing and Speech; 730303 Occupational; C1; children; Communication; Electromagnetic Articulography; kinematics; Rehabilitation; speech and physiotherapy; tongue; Traumatic Brain-injury; undifferentiated gestures
URL: https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:130820
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7
Treating dysarthria following traumatic brain injury: Investigating the benefits of commencing treatment during post-traumatic amnesia in two participants
McGhee, Hannah; Cornwell, Petrea; Addis, Paula. - : Informa Healthcare, 2006
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8
Effects of two treatments for aprosodia secondary to acquired brain injury
Rosenbek, John C.; Rodriguez, Amy D.; Hieber, Bethany. - : Department of Veterans Affairs, 2006
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9
Kinematic analysis of jaw function in children following traumatic brain injury
Loh, EWL; Goozee, JV; Murdoch, BE. - : Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2005
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10
Introducing the pressure-sensing palatograph - the next frontier in electropalatography
Murdoch, Bruce E.; Goozee, Justine V.; Veidt, Martin. - : Taylor & Francis, 2004
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11
Perceptual and instrumental analysis of laryngeal function after traumatic brain injury in childhood
Cahill, LM; Murdoch, BE; Theodoros, DG. - : Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2003
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