The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics -

The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics

Buch | Softcover
712 Seiten
2010
Wiley-Blackwell (Verlag)
978-1-4443-3877-5 (ISBN)
48,90 inkl. MwSt
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The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics brings together an international team of contributors to produce an original and in-depth survey of this multi-faceted field. It fills a gap in the existing literature as the first non-encyclopedic volume to provide comprehensive, up to date coverage of this ever-expanding area of linguistics.
The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics brings together an international team of contributors to create an original, in-depth survey of the field for students and practitioners of speech-language pathology, linguistics, psychology, and education.


Explores the field of clinical linguistics: the application of the principles and methods of linguistics to the study of language disability in all its forms

Fills a gap in the existing literature, creating the first non-encyclopedic volume to explore this ever-expanding area of linguistic concern and research

Includes a range of pathologies, with each section exploring multilingual and cross-linguistics aspects of the field, as well as analytical methods and assessment

Describes how mainstream theories and descriptions of language have been influenced by clinical research

Martin J. Ball is Hawthorne Endowed Professor and Head of the Department of Communicative Disorders at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. Michael R. Perkins is Professor of Clinical Linguistics in the Department of Human Communication Sciences at the University of Sheffield, England. Nicole Müller is Hawthorne-BoRSF Endowed Professor in the Department of Communicative Disorders at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. Sara Howard is Senior Lecturer in Clinical Phonetics in the Department of Human Communication Sciences at the University of Sheffield.

Notes on Contributors v

List of Figures viii

Notes on Contributors x

Introduction xxiii
Martin J. Ball, Michael R. Perkins, Nicole Müller, and Sara Howard

Part I Pragmatics, Discourse, and Sociolinguistics 1

1 Discourse Analysis and Communication Impairment 3
Nicole Müller, Jacqueline A. Guendouzi, and Brent Wilson

2 Conversational Implicature and Communication Impairment 32
Elisabeth Ahlsén

3 Relevance Theory and Communication Disorders 49
Eeva Leinonen and Nuala Ryder

4 Neuropragmatics 61
Brigitte Stemmer

5 Pragmatic Impairment as an Emergent Phenomenon 79
Michael R. Perkins

6 Conversation Analysis and Communication Disorders 92
Ray Wilkinson

7 Clinical Sociolinguistics 107
Jack S. Damico and Martin J. Ball

8 Systemic Functional Linguistics and Communication Impairment 130
Alison Ferguson and Julie Thomson

9 Cross-Linguistic and Multilingual Perspectives on Communicative Competence and Communication Impairment: Pragmatics, Discourse, and Sociolinguistics 146
Zhu Hua and Li Wei

Part II Syntax and Semantics 163

10 Chomskyan Syntactic Theory and Language Disorders 165
Harald Clahsen

11 Formulaic Sequences and Language Disorder 184
Alison Wray

12 Syntactic Processing in Developmental and Acquired Language Disorders 198
Theodoros Marinis

13 Morphology and Language Disorder 212
Martina Penke

14 Normal and Pathological Semantic Processing of Words 228
Karima Kahlaoui and Yves Joanette

15 Neural Correlates of Normal and Pathological Language Processing 245
Stefan Frisch, Sonja A. Kotz, and Angela D. Friederici

16 Bilingualism and Language Impairment 261
Jan de Jong

17 Cross-Linguistic Perspectives on the Syntax and Semantics of Language Disorders 275
Martha Crago, Johanne Paradis, and Lise Menn

18 Interfaces between Cognition, Semantics, and Syntax 290
Maria Black and Shula Chiat

Part III Phonetics and Phonology 309

19 Instrumental Analysis of Articulation in Speech Impairment 311
Fiona E. Gibbon

20 Instrumental Analysis of Resonance in Speech Impairment 332
Tara L. Whitehill and Alice S.-Y. Lee

21 Instrumental Analysis of Phonation 344
Shaheen N. Awan

22 Acoustic Analysis of Speech 360
Ray D. Kent and Yunjung Kim

23 Clinical Phonetic Transcription 381=
Barry Heselwood and Sara Howard

24 Comparisons in Perception between Speech and Nonspeech Signals 400
Tessa Bent and David B. Pisoni

25 Phonological Analysis, Phonological Processes 412
Adele W. Miccio and Shelley E. Scarpino

26 Constraints-Based Nonlinear Phonological Theories: Application and Implications 423
Barbara M. H. Bernhardt and Joseph P. Stemberger

27 Optimality Theory: A Clinical Perspective 439
Daniel A. Dinnsen and Judith A. Gierut

28 Government Phonology and Speech Impairment 452
Martin J. Ball

29 Articulatory Phonology and Speech Impairment 467
Pascal H. H. M. van Lieshout and Louis M. Goldstein

30 A Cognitive Approach to Clinical Phonology 480
Anna Vogel Sosa and Joan L. Bybee

31 Neurophonetics 491
Wolfram Ziegler

32 Coarticulation and Speech Impairment 506
Bill Hardcastle and Kris Tjaden

33 Vowel Development and Disorders 525
Carol Stoel-Gammon and Karen Pollock

34 Prosodic Impairments 549
Bill Wells and Sandra Whiteside

35 Speech Intelligibility 568
Gary Weismer

36 Connected Speech 583
Sara Howard, Bill Wells, and John Local

37 Sociophonetics and Clinical Linguistics 603
Gerrard Docherty and Ghada Khattab

38 Cross-Linguistic Phonological Acquisition 626
David Ingram

Author Index 641

Subject Index 668

Erscheint lt. Verlag 10.12.2010
Reihe/Serie Blackwell Handbooks in Linguistics
Verlagsort Hoboken
Sprache englisch
Maße 173 x 246 mm
Gewicht 1229 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Sprachwissenschaft
ISBN-10 1-4443-3877-3 / 1444338773
ISBN-13 978-1-4443-3877-5 / 9781444338775
Zustand Neuware
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