In:Clinical Linguistics: Theory and applications in speech pathology and therapy
Edited by Elisabetta Fava
[Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 227] 2002
► pp. vii–viii
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Published online: 18 July 2002
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.227.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.227.toc
Table of contents
Acknowledgmentsv
I. Phonology in clinical applications
Phonology as human behavior: Theoretical implications and cognitive and clinical applications
Segmental vs syllable markedness: Deletion errors in the paraphasias of fluent and non-fluent aphasics
II. Words in deafness and stuttering
Morphosyntactic fragility in the spoken and written Italian of the deaf
The EXPLAN theory of fluency control applied to the diagnosis of stuttering
The EXPLAN theory of fluency control applied to the treatment of stuttering
III. Morphology and syntax in child language disorders
Verb Movement and finiteness in language impairment and language development
A-bar movement constructions in Greek children with SLI: Evidence for deficits in the syntactic component of language
Morphological accessibility in Zulu
Language production in Japanese preschoolers with specific language impairment: Testing theories
IV. Issues on grammar and cognition
Testing linguistic concepts: Are we testing semantics, syntax or pragmatics?
SLI and modularity: Linguistic and non-linguistic explanations
The language/cognition interface: Lessons from SLI and Williams Syndrome
V. Grammatical structure in aphasia
Grammar and fluent aphasia
Failure to agree in agrammatism
The Verb and Sentence test: Assessing verb and sentence comprehension and production in aphasia
Case assignment as an explanation for determiner omission in German agrammatic speech
The role of verbal morphology in aphasia during lexical access: Evidence from Greek
Index of Subjects
List of Contributors
