Hugendubel.info - Die B2B Online-Buchhandlung 

Merkliste
Die Merkliste ist leer.
Bitte warten - die Druckansicht der Seite wird vorbereitet.
Der Druckdialog öffnet sich, sobald die Seite vollständig geladen wurde.
Sollte die Druckvorschau unvollständig sein, bitte schliessen und "Erneut drucken" wählen.
BuchGebunden
672 Seiten
Englisch
Wiley & Sonserschienen am22.02.20242. Aufl.
The new edition of the leading reference work on Clinical Linguistics, fully updated with new research and developments in the field The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics, Second Edition provides a timely and authoritative survey of this interdisciplinary field, exploring the application of linguistic theory and method to the study of speech and language disorders. Containing 42 in-depth chapters by an international panel of established and rising scholars, this classic volume addresses a wide range of pathologies while offering valuable insights into key theory and research, multilingual and cross-linguistics factors, analysis and assessment methods, and more. Now in its second edition, The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics features nine entirely new chapters on clinical corpus linguistics, multimodal analysis, cognition and language, the linguistics of sign languages, clinical phonotactics, typical and nontypical phonological development, clinical phonology and phonological assessment, and two chapters on instrumental analysis of voice and speech production. Revised and expanded chapters incorporate new research in clinical linguistics and place greater emphasis on specific speech disorders, connections to literacy, and multilingualism. This invaluable reference works: Reflects the latest developments in new research and data, as well as changing perspectives about the priorities and future of the fieldFeatures new and revised chapters throughout, many with new authors or authorial teamsOffers well-rounded coverage of the major areas of the speech sciences in the study of communication disorders Discusses how mainstream theories and descriptions of language are influenced by clinical researchBuilding on the success of the first edition, The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics, Second Edition, is an indispensable resource for researchers and advanced students across all areas of speech-language sciences, including speech disorders, speech pathology, speech therapy, communication disorders, cognitive linguistics, and neurolinguistics.mehr
Verfügbare Formate
BuchGebunden
EUR183,50
TaschenbuchKartoniert, Paperback
EUR46,00
E-BookPDF2 - DRM Adobe / Adobe Ebook ReaderE-Book
EUR149,99
E-BookEPUB2 - DRM Adobe / EPUBE-Book
EUR149,99

Produkt

KlappentextThe new edition of the leading reference work on Clinical Linguistics, fully updated with new research and developments in the field The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics, Second Edition provides a timely and authoritative survey of this interdisciplinary field, exploring the application of linguistic theory and method to the study of speech and language disorders. Containing 42 in-depth chapters by an international panel of established and rising scholars, this classic volume addresses a wide range of pathologies while offering valuable insights into key theory and research, multilingual and cross-linguistics factors, analysis and assessment methods, and more. Now in its second edition, The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics features nine entirely new chapters on clinical corpus linguistics, multimodal analysis, cognition and language, the linguistics of sign languages, clinical phonotactics, typical and nontypical phonological development, clinical phonology and phonological assessment, and two chapters on instrumental analysis of voice and speech production. Revised and expanded chapters incorporate new research in clinical linguistics and place greater emphasis on specific speech disorders, connections to literacy, and multilingualism. This invaluable reference works: Reflects the latest developments in new research and data, as well as changing perspectives about the priorities and future of the fieldFeatures new and revised chapters throughout, many with new authors or authorial teamsOffers well-rounded coverage of the major areas of the speech sciences in the study of communication disorders Discusses how mainstream theories and descriptions of language are influenced by clinical researchBuilding on the success of the first edition, The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics, Second Edition, is an indispensable resource for researchers and advanced students across all areas of speech-language sciences, including speech disorders, speech pathology, speech therapy, communication disorders, cognitive linguistics, and neurolinguistics.
Details
ISBN/GTIN978-1-119-87590-1
ProduktartBuch
EinbandartGebunden
Erscheinungsjahr2024
Erscheinungsdatum22.02.2024
Auflage2. Aufl.
Seiten672 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
Gewicht1408 g
Artikel-Nr.58589339

Inhalt/Kritik

Inhaltsverzeichnis
List of Figures ix Notes on Contributors xiii Introduction xxxiMartin J. Ball, nicole Müller, and elizaBeth Spencer Part 1: Pragmatics, Discourse, and Sociolinguistics 1 1 Discourse Analysis and Communication Impairment 3Louise C. Keegan, Jacqueline A. Guendouzi, and Nicole Müller 2 Conversational Implicature and Communication Disorders 15Francesca Foppolo and Greta Mazzaggio 3 Relevance Theory and Communication Atypicalities 29Elly Ifantidou and Tim Wharton 4 Neuropragmatics 41Luca Bischetti, Federico Frau, and Valentina Bambini 5 Pragmatic Impairment as an Emergent Phenomenon 55Michael R. Perkins and Jamie H. Azios 6 Conversation Analysis and Communication Disorders 69Ray Wilkinson 7 Clinical Sociolinguistics 81Brent Archer, Eleanor Gulick, Jack S. Damico, and Martin J. Ball 8 Systemic Functional Linguistics and Communication Disorders 99Elizabeth Spencer and Alison Ferguson 9 Multimodal Analysis of Interaction 115Scott Barnes and Francesco Possemato 10 Cross-Linguistic and Multilingual Perspectives on Communicative Competence and Communication Impairment: Pragmatics, Discourse, and Sociolinguistics 129Zhu Hua and Li Wei 11 Clinical Corpus Linguistics 143Davida Fromm and Brian MacWhinney Part 2: Syntax and Semantics 157 12 Generative Syntactic Theory and Language Disorders 159Martina Penke and Eva Wimmer 13 Formulaic Sequences and Language Disorders 177Alison Wray 14 Syntactic Processing in Developmental and Acquired Language Disorders 189Theodoros Marinis 15 Inflectional Morphology and Language Disorders 201Martina Penke 16 Normal and Impaired Semantic Processing of Words 215Marilyne Joyal, Maximiliano A. Wilson, and Yves Joanette 17 Neural Correlates of Neurotypical and Pathological Language Processing 229Sonja A. Kotz, Stefan Frisch, and Angela D. Friederici 18 Developmental Language Disorder in a Bilingual Context 245Jan de Jong 19 Cross-Linguistic Perspectives on Morphosyntax in Child Language Disorders 259Stanislava Antonijevic and Natalia Meir 20 The Complex Relationship between Cognition and Language Illustrations from Acquired Aphasia 273Lyndsey Nickels, Bruna Tessaro, Solène Hameau, and Christos Salis 21 Linguistic and Motoric Disorders in the Sign Modality 287Martha E. Tyrone Part 3: Phonology 301 22 Phonology and Clinical Phonology 303Elena Even-Simkin 23 Constraints-based Nonlinear Phonological Theories in Clinical Phonology Across Languages 317Barbara May Bernhardt, Joseph P. Stemberger, Glenda Mason, and Daniel Bérubé 24 Articulatory Phonology and Speech Impairment 333Christina Hagedorn and Aravind Namasivayam 25 Government Phonology and Speech Impairment 351Martin J. Ball and Ben Rutter 26 A Usage-based Approach to Clinical Phonology 365Anna V. Sosa and Joan L. Bybee 27 Typical and Nontypical Phonological Development 377Michelle Pascoe 28 Vowel Development and Disorders 391Karen Pollock and Carol Stoel-Gammon 29 Cross-Linguistic Phonological Acquisition 407David Ingram and Elena Babatsouli 30 Cross-linguistic Aspects of System and Structure in Clinical Phonology 421Mehmet Yavas and Margaret Kehoe 31 Connected Speech 437Caroline Newton, Sara Howard, Bill Wells, and John Local 32 Clinical Phonology and Phonological Assessment 453Barbara Dodd, Alison Holm and Sharon Crosbie Part 4: Phonetics 469 33 Phonetic Transcription in Clinical Practice 471Sally Bates, Jocelynne Watson, Barry Heselwood, and Sara Howard 34 Instrumental Analysis of Speech Production 489Lucie Ménard and Mark Tiede 35 Instrumental Analysis of Articulation 505Yunjung Kim, Raymond D. Kent, and Austin Thompson 36 Instrumental Analysis of Voice 523Meike Brockmann-Bauser 37 Measures of Speech Perception 539Jan Wouters, Robin Gransier, and Astrid van Wieringen 38 Neurophonetics 561Wolfram Ziegler, Ingrid Aichert, Theresa Schölderle, and Anja Staiger 39 Coarticulation and Speech Impairment 573Ivana Didirková 40 Prosodic Impairments 589Bill Wells and Traci Walker 41 Speech Intelligibility 605Julie Liss 42 Sociophonetics and Clinical Linguistics 615Gerard Docherty and Ghada Khattab Index 633mehr

Autor

Martin J. Ball is Honorary Professor at Prifysgol Bangor University, Wales, and former Professor of Speech-Language Pathology at Linköping University, Sweden. He has published many field-defining works and is a renowned scholar of clinical linguistics and Celtic languages.

Nicole Müller is Professor of Speech and Hearing Sciences in the School of Clinical Therapies at University College Cork, Ireland. She has published widely in the fields of clinical linguistics and speech and language pathology.

Elizabeth Spencer is Senior Lecturer of Speech Pathology at the University of Newcastle, Australia. She currently studies the effects of aging on language and performs discourse analysis within the field of speech pathology.