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Perception and expression of emotion in TBI : identification of emotion, recognition of emotional ambiguity, and emotional verbal fluency
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Augmented reality for speech and language intervention in autism spectrum disorder
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Comparison of traditional and telepractice-based treatment in the management of stroke-related aphasia
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Code-switching patterns and inhibitory control in bilinguals with traumatic brain injury
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Differentiation of the presence and severity of apraxia of speech in English and Spanish speakers
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Category, letter and emotional verbal fluency in Spanish-English bilingual individuals with and without traumatic brain injury
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Case study of improving the speech intelligibility of children with Down syndrome using pacing boards
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Effects of naturalistic and peer mediated conversation skills training for young adults with ASD
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Abstract:
text ; Purpose: This pilot study sought to examine the efficacy of a naturalistic and peer-supported group language and social skills intervention program called Training for Adults in Language and Other Key Skills (TALKS). This group therapy is offered at the University of Texas at Austin Speech and Hearing Center each semester. The researcher hypothesized that individuals participating in the program would present with increased production of total utterances and decreased productions of off-topic comments and questions during conversations. Methods: Two adult English-speaking males diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder participated in weekly 10-minute Skype conversations both before and during participation in the group therapy. Each 10-minute Skype conversation was recorded and coded to determine ratio of utterances, total comment and off-topic comment production, and total question and off-topic question production. Each Skype video was double coded to ensure accuracy of the data. Results: Participants presented with overall increases in total utterance production and ratio of total utterances across treatment phases. Data indicated a decrease in both off-topic comment and question production for both participants. Both participants performed consistently in their overall question production across all treatment phases. Conclusion: The Training for Adults in Language and Other Key Skills program had a positive effect on each of the participants' social language skills. Future research should include a larger number of participants and additional consecutive treatment phases. ; Communication Sciences and Disorders
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Keyword:
Adult; Autism; Group; Language; Peer support; Pragmatics; Social skills; Social training
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2152/31806 https://doi.org/10.15781/T2D316
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Generative naming in Korean-English bilingual speakers and assessment tests for Korean-English bilingual speakers with aphasia
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Identification of sentence emotional content in individuals with traumatic brain injury
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Silent phoneme monitoring of nonwords in adults who do and do not stutter
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