SPEECH SOUND AND ARTICULATION DISORDERS with COMPLETE QUESTIONS AND CORRECT DETAILED ANSWERS WITH RATIONALES (VERIFIED ANSWERS) |ALREADY GRADED A+
Describe Oller's Phonation Stage - ANSWERS1. Reflexive vocalizations (burping, coughing, crying) 2. Automatic responses that mirror the physical status of the baby 3. Quasi vowels: vowels that are not fully formed and do not have the same speech quality as adult productions 3. Produced when unattended/alone and purpose is unknown Describe Oller's Primitive Articulation Stage - ANSWERS1. Squeals and Growls 2. Photophones (coo-ing & goo-ing) : early vocalizations that are related to more precise productions that are developed later that are interrupted by tongue contact in the back of the oral cavity . -tongue contact in the back of the oral cavity and not the front is due to infants spending a majority of their time on their backs 3. Typically CV or VC that usually back vowels and back consonants 4. Production of primitive syllable sequences when alone and in the presence of adults Describe Oller's Exploration/Expansion Stage - ANSWERS1. Vocal play and exploration: change their pitch, amplitude, duration, and quality (vocal raspberries: bilabial and linguolabial trills) 2. Better control over their speech mechanisms and can create fuller vowels with better resonance 3. Marginal babbling begins around 6 months of age where single syllables sound more like true consonants and vowels but still do not possess typical timing, resonance, or loudness like adult sounds. This is continued precursory for sound development Describe Ollers Canonical Babbling Stage - ANSWERS1. CV syllable shape continue and further resemble true sounds 2. Reduplicated Babbling: repetition of single syllable 3. Phonetic Repertoire now includes a variety of sounds like stops, nasals, glides, lax vowels, etc. *babbling continues through this stage and will typically overlap with the infants first true words* Describe Ollers Variegated Babbling Stage - ANSWERS1. contains the same consonant-vowel syllable shape but the sound changes between syllables (ex: madaba) 2. Intonation takes on a more adult like quality How are consonants classified ? - ANSWERSVoice, Place, and Manner Place of Articulation describes what ? - ANSWERSPlace of articulation describes the location of the constriction in the vocal tract. Name & briefly describe the different "Places" of consonants - ANSWERSBilabial: produced with the two lips (/b/) Labiodental: produced by contact of the lips and teeth (/f/) Dental: produced by contact of the tip of the tongue with the upper teeth ("th") Alveolar: produced by contact of the tongue and alveolar ridge (/t/) Palatal: produced by contact of the tongue and hard palate ("shhh") Velar: produced by contact of the back of the tongue and the velum (/k/) Glottal: produced by keeping the vocal folds open and letting air pass through (/h/) Manner of articulation described what? - ANSWERSManner of articulation describes the degre
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speech sound and articulation disorders with comp
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speech sound and articulation disorders with co
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speech sound and articulation disorder