web.archive.org

speech defect - HighBeam Encyclopedia

  • ️Sun Oct 01 2000

speech defect any condition that interferes with the mental formation of words or their physical production. Speech defects in children generally become apparent in the early school years. Speech problems may arise from organic or functional abnormalities, but in practice the two are often hard to differentiate. Organic defects include deafness, cleft palate , dental abnormalities, and brain damage; most functional problems are basically psychological. Speech defects are generally categorized as disorders of sound production; disorders of voicing, e.g., loudness, pitch, and quality deviations; disorders of rhythm, such as stuttering and stammering; and disorders of language formulation and expression, including aphasia , the inability to use words as symbols of ideas. Treatment of a speech defect may include correction of organic conditions, psychotherapy, and training in proper articulation; it is rarely limited to a single type of therapy.

Author not available, SPEECH DEFECT., The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2006

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2006 Columbia University Press  For permission to reuse this article, contact Copyright Clearance Center.

Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:

Related articles from HighBeam Research:

Suharto has speech defect due to stroke
Kyodo World News Service; 7/21/1999; 606 words;
[1647] Teacher with speech defect not entitled to disability.
Australasian Business Intelligence; 9/24/2003; 194 words;
Voice Of The Mirror: Speech defect.(Leader)
The Mirror (London, England); 8/7/2000; 88 words;
LOST FOR WORDS; Mum claims MMR vaccine gave her son speech defect.(News)
The Mirror (London, England); 8/30/1999; Martin, Tom; 381 words;
Auto News Briefly.(Briefs)(supply and demand of Ford Mustang)(defects in Mercedes-Benz)(speech of Robert Lutz)
Automotive News; 4/18/2005; 403 words;
Sue Carroll's column: WILLS' SPEECH DEFECT.(Features)
The Mirror (London, England); 6/21/2000; Carroll, Sue; 234 words;
BRAIN DEFECT MAY PLAY ROLE IN STUTTERING
United Press International; 8/1/2002; 500 words;
BRAIN DEFECT IS KEY TO WYCKOFF TEENS' CASE
The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 5/5/1997; DOUG MOST, Staff Writer; 1466 words;
Birth defects - life does go on. (includes related article on fetal alcohol syndrome)
Current Health 2, a Weekly Reader publication; 10/1/1993; Purdy, Candy; 859 words;
RESEARCHERS SAY CELL DEFECT MAY HOLD CLUE TO ALZHEIMER'S
Denver Rocky Mountain News; 9/5/1997; Gene Emery; Reuter; 393 words;
RESEARCHERS SAY CELL DEFECT MAY HOLD CLUE TO ALZHEIMER'S.(News/National/International)
Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO); 9/5/1997; 375 words;
Don't betray your fatherland: Cuba warns Olympic athletes against temptation to defect
Voice, The; 8/14/2000; Simmons-Lewis, Suzanne; 616 words;
Tories set to defect.(News)
The Mirror (London, England); 8/31/2001; 88 words;
Court rejects appeal in Texas case of birth defects and jucial insult
AP Online; 5/18/1998; RICHARD CARELLI Associated Press Writer; 411 words;
Cambodian opposition members defect to FUNCINPEC party.
Xinhua News Agency; 8/24/2004; 217 words;

See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.

Browse by alphabet: