1991
DOI: 10.1016/0007-1226(91)90018-f
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Consonant articulation in the different types of cleft lip and palate

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Cited by 14 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…On occasion, bilabial and labiodental sounds may be difficult to reproduce. Palatalization and lateralization of alveolar speech sounds is commonly encountered [15]. The degree to which a patient is affected may be related to the severity of the skeletal discrepancy.…”
Section: Early Orthodontics (5-8 Years Old)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On occasion, bilabial and labiodental sounds may be difficult to reproduce. Palatalization and lateralization of alveolar speech sounds is commonly encountered [15]. The degree to which a patient is affected may be related to the severity of the skeletal discrepancy.…”
Section: Early Orthodontics (5-8 Years Old)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They studied lateral EPG patterns in cleft palate speech 25 release of /t/ and /k/ targets produced by an adult with cleft palate (figure 11). Lateral release can occur as a secondary feature of lingual stops (Albery 1991), but this feature has received little attention in the cleft palate literature. This lack of research is surprising because lateral release affects the quality of the acoustic cues that listeners use to identify place of articulation, with the result that abnormal lateral release is likely to have an adverse effect on speech intelligibility.…”
Section: Pattern 6 Double Articulationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Data suggesting a tendency to a more backward articulation in early cleft palate speech are reported in the literature, including retraction to a place posterior to the velopharyngeal area (e.g. Trost 1981, Estrem and Broen 1989, Powers et al 1990, Chapman and Hardin 1992, Albery and Grunwell 1993, Chapman 1993, Harding and Grunwell 1993, Russell and Grunwell 1993, Stokes and Whitehill 1996. In the present study, a more backward articulation only occurs with pressure consonants -apart from /r/ realised as [h], and only retraction to glottis ([ ] and [h]) is among the predominant characteristics.…”
Section: Cleft Speech Characteristicsmentioning
confidence: 99%