Radiation therapy (XRT) for laryngeal cancers causes acute and chronic vocal dysfunction. Although these deleterious effects of XRT are well-established, there is a dearth of research with respect to effective voice rehabilitation following XRT for laryngeal cancers.
Publication date: Available online 22 June 2019Source: Journal of VoiceAuthor(s): Vrushali Angadi, Emily Dressler, Mahesh Kudrimoti, Joseph Valentino, Rony Aouad, Thomas Gal, Joseph StempleAbstractBackgroundRadiation therapy (XRT) for laryngeal cancers causes acute and chronic vocal dysfunction. Although these deleterious effects of XRT are well-established, there is a dearth of research with respect to effective voice rehabilitation following XRT for laryngeal cancers.ObjectiveTo obtain preliminary...
Publication date: Available online 22 June 2019Source: Journal of VoiceAuthor(s): Lauren H. Allison, Mary J. Sandage, Aurora J. WeaverSummaryThe purpose of this research was to characterize the voice physiology requirements of indoor cycling instructors as measured by vocal dose (distance the vocal folds travel and average voice intensity) and perceived phonatory effort with and without amplification. Using a within-participant repeated measures design, eight rhythm-based cycling instructors were...
Publication date: July 2019Source: Journal of Phonetics, Volume 75Author(s): Jennifer Cole, José I. Hualde, Caroline L. Smith, Christopher Eager, Timothy Mahrt, Ricardo Napoleão de SouzaAbstractThis study tests the influence of acoustic cues and non-acoustic contextual factors on listeners’ perception of prominence in three languages whose prominence systems differ in the phonological patterning of prominence and in the association of prominence with information structure—English, French and Spanish....
Publication date: August 2019Source: Brain and Language, Volume 195Author(s): Brandin A. Munson, Arturo E. HernandezAbstractResearch on structural brain differences between monolinguals and bilinguals remains inconsistent, and this has been proposed by some to be due in part to inadequate sample sizes. The aim of the present study is to reveal the expected degrees of uncertainty among neuroimaging findings by analyzing random samples of varying sizes from a larger-than-average sample. Bilinguals...
Publication date: Available online 22 June 2019Source: Brain and LanguageAuthor(s):
Publication date: July–September 2019Source: Revista de Logopedia, Foniatría y Audiología, Volume 39, Issue 3Author(s): Isabelle Monfort Juárez
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