Communication Disorders in Spanish Speakers : : Theoretical, Research and Clinical Aspects / / ed. by José G. Centeno, Raquel T. Anderson, Loraine K. Obler.

Spanish speakers, whether in monolingual or bilingual situations, or in majority or minority contexts, represent a considerable population worldwide. Spanish speakers in the U.S. constitute an illustrative context of the challenges faced by speech-language practitioners to provide realistic services...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter MultiLingual Matters Backlist eBook-Package 2000-2013
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HerausgeberIn:
Place / Publishing House:Bristol ;, Blue Ridge Summit : : Multilingual Matters, , [2007]
©2007
Year of Publication:2007
Language:English
Series:Communication Disorders Across Languages
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource
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Description
Other title:Frontmatter --
Contents --
Contributors --
Acknowledgments --
Introduction --
Part 1: Preliminary Considerations --
Chapter 1. Contrastive Analysis between Spanish and English --
Chapter 2. English Language Learners: Literacy and Biliteracy Considerations --
Chapter 3. Bilingual Development and Communication: Implications for Clinical Language Studies --
Chapter 4. Neurolinguistic Aspects of Bilingualism --
Chapter 5. Sociocultural, Societal, and Psychological Aspects of Bilingualism: Variables, Interactions, and Therapeutic Implications in Speech-Language Pathology --
Chapter 6. Cross-linguistic Research: The Convergence of Monolingual and Bilingual Data --
Chapter 7. The Cognitive Neuropsychology of Language Disorders among Spanish Speakers --
Chapter 8. Ethical and Methodological Considerations in Clinical Communication Research with Hispanic Populations --
Part 2: Research in Children: Conceptual, Methodological, Empirical, and Clinical Considerations --
Chapter 9. Exploring the Grammar of Spanish-speaking Children with Specific Language Impairment --
Chapter 10. Language Elicitation and Analysis as a Research and Clinical Tool for Latino Children --
Chapter 11. Utterance Length Measures for Spanish-speaking Toddlers: The Morpheme versus Word Issue Revisited --
Chapter 12. Lexical Skills in Young Children Learning a Second Language: Methods, Results, and Clinical Applications --
Chapter 13. Measuring Phonological Skills in Bilingual Children: Methodology and Clinical Applications --
Part 3: Research in Adults: Empirical Evidence and Clinical Implications --
Chapter 14. Prepositional Processing in Spanish Speakers with Aphasia: The Role of Semantic Value and Amount of Contextual Information --
Chapter 15. Cohesion in the Conversational Samples of Broca’s Aphasic Individuals: Theoretical and Clinical Implications --
Chapter 16. Language Switching in the Context of Spanish–English Bilingual Aphasia --
Chapter 17. Description and Detection of Acquired Dyslexia and Dysgraphia in Spanish --
Chapter 18. Cross-linguistic Aspects of Dyslexia in Spanish–English Bilinguals --
Chapter 19. Neuropsychological Profile of Adult Illiterates and the Development and Application of a Neuropsychological Program for Learning to Read --
Chapter 20. Phonetic Descriptions of Speech Production in Bilingual Speakers: Empirical Evidence and Clinical Considerations --
Epilogue --
Index
Summary:Spanish speakers, whether in monolingual or bilingual situations, or in majority or minority contexts, represent a considerable population worldwide. Spanish speakers in the U.S. constitute an illustrative context of the challenges faced by speech-language practitioners to provide realistic services to an increasing and diverse Spanish-speaking caseload. There is still considerable paucity in the amount of literature on Hispanic individuals with clinical relevance in speech-language pathology. Particularly lacking are works that link both empirical and theoretical bases to evidence-based procedures for child and adult Spanish users with communication disorders. Further, because communication skills depend on multiple phenomena beyond strictly linguistic factors, speech-language students and practitioners require multidisciplinary bases to realistically understand Spanish clients’ communication performance. This volume attempts to address those gaps. This publication takes a multidisciplinary approach that integrates both theoretical and empirical grounds from Speech-Language Pathology, Neurolinguistics, Neuropsychology, Education, and Clinical Psychology to develop evidence-based clinical procedures for monolingual Spanish and bilingual Spanish-English children and adults with communication disorders.
Format:Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
ISBN:9781853599736
9783111024738
9783110663136
9783110606713
DOI:10.21832/9781853599736
Access:restricted access
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: ed. by José G. Centeno, Raquel T. Anderson, Loraine K. Obler.