2009
DOI: 10.1002/9780470611869
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From Speech Physiology to Linguistic Phonetics

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Cited by 14 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…One of these structures is the hyoglossus, which raises the hyoid bone, and if this bony structure is fixed, the tongue is lowered and retracted. 22 This finding would also explain why there were effects on tongue retraction in the L group -first tumor-induced, and later as an effect of chemoradiotherapy. For most other articulation proficiency measures, the L group could serve as a "control" group.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…One of these structures is the hyoglossus, which raises the hyoid bone, and if this bony structure is fixed, the tongue is lowered and retracted. 22 This finding would also explain why there were effects on tongue retraction in the L group -first tumor-induced, and later as an effect of chemoradiotherapy. For most other articulation proficiency measures, the L group could serve as a "control" group.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…These findings indicate problems in the functioning of muscles such as the posterior part of the genioglossus, the styloglossus, and the palatoglossus. [22][23][24] The L group, previously shown to be prone to significant treatment effects on voice quality, 19,21 was less affected in articulation by the tumor or its treatment. The fact that the BT and NT groups already presented with significant signs of articulation impairment before treatment coincides with pretreatment results on speech (intelligibility) in studies on patients with advanced oral or oropharyngeal cancer.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Коартикулацијата генерално се дефинира како влијание на еден фонетски сегмент врз друг (Marchal, 2009). Таа е преклопување помеѓу артикулациите на соседните фонеми.…”
Section: воведunclassified
“…The styloglossi, transversus, verticalis, and longitudinal muscles work together to shape the tongue and move the tip [20,26,33,34]. For /t/, studies have shown the activity of the superior longitudinal muscles, the anterior digastric, the mylohyoid, and, for the release of the (post-) alveolar constriction, activity of the inferior longitudinal muscles [35]. Next to the genioglossus, the verticalis and transversi, together with the longitudinal muscles are also known to affect central grooving [26,35], and were covered in the delineated oral cavity, and accordingly, increasing doses to the tongue correlated with decreases in /s/ quality and strength of /t/.…”
Section: From Pretreatment To 1-year Follow-upmentioning
confidence: 99%