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Defining ‘Normal’: methodological issues in Aphasia and intelligence research
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The East India Company Language Policy in the early 19th Century
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Victorian medical awareness of childhood language disabilities
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Beyond existing prosodic dichotomies: perception of aesthetic prosodic properties of speech and music in a right-hemisphere stroke patient
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The laryngoscope and 19th century British understanding of laryngeal movements
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Abstract:
The source of the human voice is obscured from view. The development of the laryngoscope in the late 1850s provided the potential to see the action of the vocal folds during speaking for the first time. This new instrument materially contributed to the understanding of vocal fold neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, and neuropathology. The laryngoscope led to the elucidation of disorders that previously were determined by changes in sound. The objective of this paper is to detail the consequences of this novel visualization of the larynx, and to trace how it led to an appreciation of how the voice was produced by movements of the vocal folds. This is demonstrated through an examination of the activities and practices of a group of London clinicians in the second half of the 19th century.
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Keyword:
Applied Linguistics and Communication (to 2020)
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URL: https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/26518/ https://doi.org/10.1080/0964704X.2019.1589874 https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/26518/1/26518.pdf
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8 |
Beyond existing prosodic dichotomies: Perception of aesthetic prosodic properties of speech and music in a right-hemisphere stroke patient ...
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Music and language expressiveness: When emotional character does not suffice: the dimension of expressiveness in the cognitive processing of music and language
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10 |
Investigating the biographical sources of Thomas Prendergast’s (1807-1886) innovation in language learning
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11 |
Preserved appreciation of aesthetic elements of speech and music prosody in an amusic individual: A holistic approach
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An ecological method for the sampling of nonverbal signalling behaviours of young children with profound and multiple learning disabilities (PMLD)
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13 |
Morell Mackenzie’s contribution to the description of spasmodic dysphonia
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The third man: Robert Dunn’s (1799-1877) contribution to aphasia research in mid 19th century England
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15 |
Review of differential diagnosis and management of spasmodic dysphonia
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Tracing Spasmodic Dysphonia: the source of Ludwig Traube’s priority
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A late 19th-Century British perspective on modern foreign language learning, teaching, and reform: the legacy of Prendergast’s “Mastery System”
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18 |
The Victorian question of the relation between language and thought
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19 |
Singing by speechless (Aphasic) children: Victorian medical observations
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20 |
Examining language functions: a reassessment of Bastian's contribution to aphasia assessment
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