992 resultados para Speech journalistic unified
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This paper is a review of acoustic phonetics as applied to auditory training for hearing impaired children.
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The primary goal of this project is to study the ability of adult cochlear implant users to perceive emotion through speech alone. A secondary goal of this project is to study the development of emotion perception in normal hearing children to serve as a baseline for comparing emotion perception abilities in similarly-aged children with impaired hearing.
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This paper discusses several tests used to measure speech intelligibility and speech discrimination.
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This paper discusses three approaches to speech development in hearing-impaired children: auditory-verbal, association phoneme unit method, and multi-sensory.
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This paper contains a speech discrimation test for hearing impaired children using Mandarin language.
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This paper discusses the results of a study undertaken to determine if there is a relationship between psychological variables and cognitive or academic variables among hearing-impaired children.
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This paper discusses the creation of a condensed list SRT application of the W-1 for the Macintosh computer.
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This paper discusses a study to determine if changes in aided articulation indices predict changes in aided speech perception ability.
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This paper reviews a study to analyze the number of times alphabet symbols occur in three commonly used basal reader series.
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This paper discusses a study to investigate the possibility of quantifying and analyzing the speech of cleft palate subjects.
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This paper discusses a study to compare two tests of loss of capacity to hear speech.
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This paper reviews a study to determine the applicabilty of the Wechsler-Bellevue and the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for severely hearing impaired children.
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This paper analyzes the phonetic accuracy of both hearing-impaired and normal-hearing individuals’ speech production.
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This paper contains a speech discrimination test in the Russian language composed of fifty known Russian monosyllables.
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This paper discusses a study to determine whether the use of meaningful speech in everyday situations is independent of a cochlear implant.