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.Relevant chapters include a range of pathologies, with each section exploring multilingual and cross-linguistics aspects of the field, as well as analytical methods and assessment. In those chapters examining a specific area of linguistics, a section has been included which outlines how mainstream theories and descriptions of language have been influenced, if at all, by clinical research. The result is an essential resource for students and practitioners of speech-language pathology, linguistics, psychology, and education.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
"This collection performs a rite of passage: clinical linguistics has come of age." David Crystal, University of Wales, Bangor
"The range of topics represented here, and the quality of the contributions, underline the advances Clinical Linguistics has made in three decades. This volume will for some time be the benchmark against which others in the field will be evaluated." Paul Fletcher, University College Cork
"This comprehensive compendium covers the breadth and depth of clinical linguistics, presenting the latest research on pragmatics, discourse, sociolinguistics, syntax, semantics, phonetics and phonology. The impressive cohort of international contributors comprises the foremost authorities in their fields. This book is a classic reference work and will be frequently cited." Sharynne McLeod, Charles Sturt University, Australia
"This Handbook offers state-of-the-art reviews and cutting-edge research reports. It is strongly recommended as a textbook for students at the master's level and higher, instructors and researchers in a variety of disciplines, including Speech-Language Pathology, Clinical Linguistics, Medicine, and Psychology." Ben Maassen, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre
Produkt-Info
Reihe
Auflage
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Zielgruppe
Für Beruf und Forschung
Advanced undergraduates, postgraduates, and practitioners of speech-language pathology, linguistics, psychology, and education
Maße
Höhe: 25.6 cm
Breite: 18.5 cm
Dicke: 5 cm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-4051-3522-1 (9781405135221)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
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.
Herausgeber*in
University of Ulster
University of Sheffield
University of Louisiana, Lafayette
University of Sheffield
1: Pragmatics, Discourse and Sociolinguistics
1. Discourse Analysis and Communication Impairment
2. Conversational Implicature and Communication Impairment
3. Relevance Theory and Language Disorders
4. Neuropragmatics
5. Pragmatic Impairment as an Emergent Phenomenon
6. Conversation Analysis and Communication Disorders
7. Clinical Sociolinguistics
8. Systemic Functional Linguistics and Communication Impairment
9. Cross-Linguistic and Multilingual Perspectives on Communicative Competence and Communication Impairment
2: Syntax and Semantics
10. Chomskyan Syntactic Theory and Language Disorder
11. Formulaic Sequences and Language Disorder
12. Syntactic Processing in Developmental and Acquired Language Disorders
13. Morphology and Language Disorder
14. Normal and Pathological Semantic Processing of Words
15. Neural Correlates of Normal and Pathological Language Processing
16. Bilingualism and Language Impairment
17. Cross-Linguistic Perspectives on the Syntax and Semantics of Language Disorder
18. Interfaces between Cognition, Semantics, and Syntax
3: Phonetics and Phonology
19. Instrumental Analysis of Articulation in Speech Impairment
20. Instrumental Analysis of Resonance in Speech Impairment
21. Instrumental Analysis of Phonation
22. Acoustic Analysis of Speech
23. Clinical Phonetic Transcription
24. Comparisons in Perception between Speech and Nonspeech Signals
25. Phonological Analysis, Phonological Processes
26. Constraint-Based Nonlinear Phonological Theories
27. Optimality Theory
28. Government Phonology and Speech Impairment
29. Articulatory Phonology and Speech Impairment
30. A Cognitive Approach to Clinical Phonology
31. Neurophonetics
32. Coarticulation and Speech Impairment
33. Vowel Development and Disorders
34. Prosodic Impairments
35. Speech Intelligibility
36. Connected Speech
37. Sociophonetics and Clinical Linguistics
38. Cross-Linguistic Phonological Acquisition
Author Index.
Subject Index