IRIS publication 13251917
Normal adult speakers' tongue palate contact patterns for alveolar oral and nasal stops
RIS format for Endnote and similar
TY - JOUR - Gibbon, F. E., Yuen, I., Lee, A., ; Adams, L. - 2007 - January - Advances In Speech-Language Pathology - Normal adult speakers' tongue palate contact patterns for alveolar oral and nasal stops - Published - () - stops electropalatography EPG articulation disorder - 9 - 1 - 82 - 89 - This study compared tongue palate contact patterns for oral stops (/t/, /d/) with those for the nasal stop /n/ in order to provide normative data for diagnosing and treating individuals with speech disorders. Electropalatographic (EPG) data were recorded from 15 English speaking adults for word initial /t/, /d/ and /n/ in a high and a low vowel context. EPG frames were classified according to three criteria: (1) anterior constriction; (2) bilateral constriction; and (3) zero posterior central contact. Total amount of contact and variability were also measured. The results showed that almost all (99%) stops met Criteria 1 and 3, with fewer articulations (88% of /t/; 83% of /d/ and 55% of /n/) meeting Criterion 2. Although all stops had similar spatial patterns, /t/ and /d/ had more contact and were more likely to have bilateral constriction than /n/. There were no differences in variability between /t/, /d/ and /n/, however. The clinical implications of the results for the management of individuals with speech disorders are discussed. - https://doi.org/10.1080/14417040600954824 DA - 2007/01 ER -
BIBTeX format for JabRef and similar
@article{V13251917, = {Gibbon, F. E., Yuen, I., Lee, A., and Adams, L.}, = {2007}, = {January}, = {Advances In Speech-Language Pathology}, = {Normal adult speakers' tongue palate contact patterns for alveolar oral and nasal stops}, = {Published}, = {()}, = {stops electropalatography EPG articulation disorder}, = {9}, = {1}, pages = {82--89}, = {{This study compared tongue palate contact patterns for oral stops (/t/, /d/) with those for the nasal stop /n/ in order to provide normative data for diagnosing and treating individuals with speech disorders. Electropalatographic (EPG) data were recorded from 15 English speaking adults for word initial /t/, /d/ and /n/ in a high and a low vowel context. EPG frames were classified according to three criteria: (1) anterior constriction; (2) bilateral constriction; and (3) zero posterior central contact. Total amount of contact and variability were also measured. The results showed that almost all (99%) stops met Criteria 1 and 3, with fewer articulations (88% of /t/; 83% of /d/ and 55% of /n/) meeting Criterion 2. Although all stops had similar spatial patterns, /t/ and /d/ had more contact and were more likely to have bilateral constriction than /n/. There were no differences in variability between /t/, /d/ and /n/, however. The clinical implications of the results for the management of individuals with speech disorders are discussed.}}, = {https://doi.org/10.1080/14417040600954824}, source = {IRIS} }
Data as stored in IRIS
AUTHORS | Gibbon, F. E., Yuen, I., Lee, A., ; Adams, L. | ||
YEAR | 2007 | ||
MONTH | January | ||
JOURNAL_CODE | Advances In Speech-Language Pathology | ||
TITLE | Normal adult speakers' tongue palate contact patterns for alveolar oral and nasal stops | ||
STATUS | Published | ||
TIMES_CITED | () | ||
SEARCH_KEYWORD | stops electropalatography EPG articulation disorder | ||
VOLUME | 9 | ||
ISSUE | 1 | ||
START_PAGE | 82 | ||
END_PAGE | 89 | ||
ABSTRACT | This study compared tongue palate contact patterns for oral stops (/t/, /d/) with those for the nasal stop /n/ in order to provide normative data for diagnosing and treating individuals with speech disorders. Electropalatographic (EPG) data were recorded from 15 English speaking adults for word initial /t/, /d/ and /n/ in a high and a low vowel context. EPG frames were classified according to three criteria: (1) anterior constriction; (2) bilateral constriction; and (3) zero posterior central contact. Total amount of contact and variability were also measured. The results showed that almost all (99%) stops met Criteria 1 and 3, with fewer articulations (88% of /t/; 83% of /d/ and 55% of /n/) meeting Criterion 2. Although all stops had similar spatial patterns, /t/ and /d/ had more contact and were more likely to have bilateral constriction than /n/. There were no differences in variability between /t/, /d/ and /n/, however. The clinical implications of the results for the management of individuals with speech disorders are discussed. | ||
PUBLISHER_LOCATION | |||
ISBN_ISSN | |||
EDITION | |||
URL | |||
DOI_LINK | https://doi.org/10.1080/14417040600954824 | ||
FUNDING_BODY | |||
GRANT_DETAILS |