Emerson thesis -- Communication sciences and disorders
Found in 10 Collections and/or Records:
Baby signs : the parental experience, 2014
The intent of this study was to examine the endurance of baby signs from the parents' perspective, with the hope to provide insight into its functional value to parents.--Abstract.
Category selection in patients with nonfluent aphasia : implications for use of a picture-based alternative communication system, 1998
Expertise of school-based speech-language pathologists who work with students who speak African American English, 2011
School-based Speech-Language Pathologists (SLPs) must be able to identify the unique features of African American English (AAE) when working with children who may or may not be from an African American background. The linguistic features of AAE often rese
Feasibility of home video training for bilingual language intervention : a case study, 2013
The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of a caregiver-based approach, Video Home Training (VHT), in intervention with a bilingual child with a language disorder and his family.--Abstract.
Indicators of spoken language development in a young deaf child after receiving a cochlear implant, 2001
Long-term recovery of naming and word-finding in narrative discourse in aphasia, 1999
Predicting the complexity of generative syntax from measures of working memory in younger and older adults, 2001
The effects of background color on speed of locating a symbol : implications for AAC display design, 2008
This research examined how foreground and background colors of visual symbols influenced how long children took to find a target. Thirty nondisabled preschoolers played a computer game in which they searched for target fruit/vegetable symbols presented in
The effects of listener age on social impressions of speakers with Parkinson's disease and healthy older adults, 2013
This study investigated the social impressions formed by younger and older healthy adults when listening to discourse samples produced by speakers with and without [Parkinson's Disease.]--Abstract.