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Translating Ultrasound into Clinical Practice for the Assessment of Swallowing and Laryngeal Function: A Speech and Language Pathology-Led Consensus Study
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In: Dysphagia (2022)
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Translating ultrasound into clinical practice for the assessment of swallowing and laryngeal function: A speech and language pathology-led consensus study
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Say again? Individual articulatory strategies for producing a clearly-spoken minimal pair wordlist
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Say again? Individual acoustic strategies for producing a clearly-spoken minimal pair wordlist
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Speech Prosody Across Stimulus Types for Individuals with Parkinson's Disease
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Motor speech disorders in Chinese
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Abstract:
Chinese, spoken by approximately 20% of the world’s population, is the most commonly spoken language in the world (Fung, 1990). There is some debate regarding whether varieties of spoken Chinese should be considered dialects or separate language. Here, we regard them as separate languages. The various languages of Chinese are considered united by a common written system, although this characterization is problematic for Cantonese, which has many colloquial expressions with no written form (Bauer & Benedict, 1997). In this chapter, we focus on two of the most common Chinese languages, Cantonese and Mandarin (Putonghua). Cantonese is spoken in Hong Kong, Southern China and many overseas Chinese communities. Mandarin, also known as Standard Chinese, is the official national language of China and Taiwan, and is one of the four official languages of Singapore. ; casl ; pub ; 3214 ; pub
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URL: http://multilingual-matters.com/display.asp?K=9781783092338 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12289/3214 https://eresearch.qmu.ac.uk/handle/20.500.12289/3214
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The tongue and lips in Lombard speech: A pilot study of vowel-space expansion
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The perception of intonation questions and statements in Cantonese
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Intonation Contrast in Cantonese Speakers With Hypokinetic Dysarthria Associated With Parkinson's Disease
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Dysprosody and stimulus effects in Cantonese speakers with Parkinson's disease
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The Impact of Cerebral Palsy on the Intelligibility of Pitch-based Linguistic Contrasts
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Perceptual characteristics of Cantonese hypokinetic dysarthria
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