Título : | Children with hearing loss : Developing listening and talking | Tipo de documento: | texto impreso | Autores: | Elizabeth Bingham Cole, Autor ; Carol Flexer, Autor ; Stach, Brad A., Editor científico | Mención de edición: | 3ª | Editorial: | San Diego [EE. UU.] : Plural Pub | Fecha de publicación: | c2016 | Colección: | Birth to six | Número de páginas: | xiv p., 486 p. | Il.: | il. | ISBN/ISSN/DL: | 978-1-597-56566-0 | Nota general: | Dedicatoria en portada: To Carmen and my dear friends at Clave -- With love and admiration! [...]
September 15, 2015 | Idioma : | Inglés (eng) | Clasificación: | Comunicacion:Motherese Comunicacion:Oralidad Discapacidad:Sordera Etapas de desarrollo:Infancia Familia:Padres Medicina Medicina:Audífono:Sistemas FM Medicina:Rehabilitación Medicina:Terapia auditiva-verbal Psicología:Terapia
| Nota de contenido: | Contiene índice y referencias bibliográficas
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
1 Neurological foundations of listening and talking
Introduction
Typical infants: listening and language development
Auditory neural development
New context for the word Deaf
Hearing versus listening
A model of hearing loss: the invisible acoustic filter effect
Think about hearing loss as a doorway problem
Summary: The "essential question" that drives technological and intervention recommendations
2 The audiovestibular system
The nature of sound
Unconscious function
Signal warning function
Spoken communication function
Acoustics
Audinility versus intelligibility of speech
The Ling 6-7 sound test: Acoustic basis and description
Audiovestibular structures
Data input analogy
Outer and middle ear
Inner ear to the brain
The vestibular system: the sensory organs of balance
3 Hearing and hearing loss in infants and children
Introduction
Classifications
Degree (Severity): Minimal to profound
Timing: congenital or acquired
General Causes: endogenous, exogenous or multifactorial
Genetics, syndromes, and sysplasias
Connexin 26
Syndromes
Inner ear dysplasias
Medical Aspects of hearing loss
Conductive pathologies and hearing loss
Sensorineural pathologies and hearing loss
Mixed, progressive, functional, and central hearing losses
Synergistic and multifactorial effects
Auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder (ANSD)
Vestibular issues
Summary
4 Diagnosing Hearing Loss
Introduction
Newborn hearing screening and EHDI programs
Test equipment and test environment
Audiologic diagnostic Assessment of infants and children
Test protocols
Pediatric behavioral tests: BOA, VRA, CPA, speech, perception testing
Electrophysiologic tests: OAE, ABR/ ASSR, and immittance
The audiogram
Configuration (pattern) of thresholds on the audiogram
Formulating a differencial diagnosis
Sensory deprivation
Ambiguity of hearing loss
Measuring distance hearing
Summary
5 Hearing aids, cochlear implants, and FM systems
Introduction
For intervention, first things first: optimize detection of the complete acoustic spectrum
Listening and learning environments
Distance hearing/incidental learning and S/N ratio
ANSI/ASA S12.60-2010: Acoustical guidelines for classroom noise and reverberation
Talker and listener physical positioning
Amplification for infants and children
Hearing aids / hearing instruments
Bone-Anchored hearing aid implants (BAI) for children
Whireless connectivity
Hearing assistance technologices (HATs) for infants and children: personal worn FM and sound-field FM and IR (classroom amplification) systems
Cochlear implants
Auditory brainstem Implant (ABI)
Measuring efficacy of fitting and use of technology
Equipment efficacy for the school system
Conclusion
6 Intervention issues
Basic premises
Differentiating dimensions among interention programs
Challenges to the process of learning spoken language
Late to full-time wearing of appropriate amplification or cochlear implant(s)
Disailities in addition to the child's hearing loss
Ongoing, persistent noise in the child's learning environment
Multilingual environment
Education options for children with hearing loss, ages 3 to 6
7 Auditory "Work"
Introduction
The primacy of audition
The acoustics-speech connection
Intensity / loudness
Frequency / pitch
Duration
The effect of hearing loss on the reception of speech
A historical look at the use of residual hearing
The concept of listening age
Auditory "skills" and auditory processing models
Theory of mind and executive functions
How to help a child learn to listen in ordinary, everyday ways
Two examples of auditory teaching and learning
Scene I: Tony
Scene II: Tamara
Targets for auditory/linguistic learning
A last word
8 Spoken language learning
Introduction
What's involved in "talking"?
How does a child learn to talk?
Relevance for intervetnion decisions
How should intervention be organized?
9 Constructing meaningful communication
Introduction
The affective relationship
The child's develpment of interactional abilities
Joint reference, or joint attention
Turn-taking conventions
Signaling of intention
Characteristics of caregiver talk
1. Content: What gets talked about?
2. Prosody: What does motherese sound like?
3. Semantics and syntax: what about complexity?
4. Repetition: Say it or play it again
5. Negotiation of meaning: Huh?
6.. Participation-elicitors: Let's (keep) talk(ing)
7. Responsiveness
Issues about motherese
How long is motherese used
Motherese: Why?
Motherese: Immaterial or facilitative?
10 Interacting in ways that promote listening and talking
Introduction
The emotional impact of a child's hearing loss on the family
Adult learning
What parents need to learn
components of intervention for babies and young children with hearing loss
When to talk with your child and what to talk about
A framework for maximizing caregiver effectiveness in promoting auditory/linguistic development in children with hearing loss
Background and rationale
Structure of the framework
Getting a representative sample of interacting
Discussing the framework with parents
Ways of adressing parent-chosen targets
Instructional targets and sequence
Teaching through incidental and embellished interacting
Teaching through incidental interacting
Embellishing and incidental interaction
Teaching spoken language through embellished interacting
Teaching listening (audition) through embellished interacting
Teaching speech through embelilshed interacting
Preplanedd parent guidance sessions or auditory-verbal therapy sessions
Components to be accomplished in a typical preplanned session
Sample preplanned scenario
Substructure
About the benefits and limitations of preplanned teaching
What does the research say?
Appendix 1: hot to grow your baby's /child's brain
Appendix 2: Application and instructions for the Ling 6-7 sound test
Appendix 3: Targets for auditory/verbal learning
Appendix 4: Explanation for items on the framework
Appendix 5: checklist for evaluating preschool group settings for children with hearing loss who are learning spoken language
Appendix 6: Selected resources
Appendix 7: Description and practice of listening and spoken language spechialists: LSLS Cert. AVT and LSLS cert. AVEd
Appendix 8: Principles of LSLS practive
Appendix 9: Knowledge and competencies needed by listening and spoken language specialists (LSLSs)
Appendix 10: Listening and spoken language domains adressed in this book
Glossary
References
Index |
Children with hearing loss : Developing listening and talking [texto impreso] / Elizabeth Bingham Cole, Autor ; Carol Flexer, Autor ; Stach, Brad A., Editor científico . - 3ª . - Plural Pub, c2016 . - xiv p., 486 p. : il.. - ( Birth to six) . ISBN : 978-1-597-56566-0 Dedicatoria en portada: To Carmen and my dear friends at Clave -- With love and admiration! [...]
September 15, 2015 Idioma : Inglés ( eng) Clasificación: | Comunicacion:Motherese Comunicacion:Oralidad Discapacidad:Sordera Etapas de desarrollo:Infancia Familia:Padres Medicina Medicina:Audífono:Sistemas FM Medicina:Rehabilitación Medicina:Terapia auditiva-verbal Psicología:Terapia
| Nota de contenido: | Contiene índice y referencias bibliográficas
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
1 Neurological foundations of listening and talking
Introduction
Typical infants: listening and language development
Auditory neural development
New context for the word Deaf
Hearing versus listening
A model of hearing loss: the invisible acoustic filter effect
Think about hearing loss as a doorway problem
Summary: The "essential question" that drives technological and intervention recommendations
2 The audiovestibular system
The nature of sound
Unconscious function
Signal warning function
Spoken communication function
Acoustics
Audinility versus intelligibility of speech
The Ling 6-7 sound test: Acoustic basis and description
Audiovestibular structures
Data input analogy
Outer and middle ear
Inner ear to the brain
The vestibular system: the sensory organs of balance
3 Hearing and hearing loss in infants and children
Introduction
Classifications
Degree (Severity): Minimal to profound
Timing: congenital or acquired
General Causes: endogenous, exogenous or multifactorial
Genetics, syndromes, and sysplasias
Connexin 26
Syndromes
Inner ear dysplasias
Medical Aspects of hearing loss
Conductive pathologies and hearing loss
Sensorineural pathologies and hearing loss
Mixed, progressive, functional, and central hearing losses
Synergistic and multifactorial effects
Auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder (ANSD)
Vestibular issues
Summary
4 Diagnosing Hearing Loss
Introduction
Newborn hearing screening and EHDI programs
Test equipment and test environment
Audiologic diagnostic Assessment of infants and children
Test protocols
Pediatric behavioral tests: BOA, VRA, CPA, speech, perception testing
Electrophysiologic tests: OAE, ABR/ ASSR, and immittance
The audiogram
Configuration (pattern) of thresholds on the audiogram
Formulating a differencial diagnosis
Sensory deprivation
Ambiguity of hearing loss
Measuring distance hearing
Summary
5 Hearing aids, cochlear implants, and FM systems
Introduction
For intervention, first things first: optimize detection of the complete acoustic spectrum
Listening and learning environments
Distance hearing/incidental learning and S/N ratio
ANSI/ASA S12.60-2010: Acoustical guidelines for classroom noise and reverberation
Talker and listener physical positioning
Amplification for infants and children
Hearing aids / hearing instruments
Bone-Anchored hearing aid implants (BAI) for children
Whireless connectivity
Hearing assistance technologices (HATs) for infants and children: personal worn FM and sound-field FM and IR (classroom amplification) systems
Cochlear implants
Auditory brainstem Implant (ABI)
Measuring efficacy of fitting and use of technology
Equipment efficacy for the school system
Conclusion
6 Intervention issues
Basic premises
Differentiating dimensions among interention programs
Challenges to the process of learning spoken language
Late to full-time wearing of appropriate amplification or cochlear implant(s)
Disailities in addition to the child's hearing loss
Ongoing, persistent noise in the child's learning environment
Multilingual environment
Education options for children with hearing loss, ages 3 to 6
7 Auditory "Work"
Introduction
The primacy of audition
The acoustics-speech connection
Intensity / loudness
Frequency / pitch
Duration
The effect of hearing loss on the reception of speech
A historical look at the use of residual hearing
The concept of listening age
Auditory "skills" and auditory processing models
Theory of mind and executive functions
How to help a child learn to listen in ordinary, everyday ways
Two examples of auditory teaching and learning
Scene I: Tony
Scene II: Tamara
Targets for auditory/linguistic learning
A last word
8 Spoken language learning
Introduction
What's involved in "talking"?
How does a child learn to talk?
Relevance for intervetnion decisions
How should intervention be organized?
9 Constructing meaningful communication
Introduction
The affective relationship
The child's develpment of interactional abilities
Joint reference, or joint attention
Turn-taking conventions
Signaling of intention
Characteristics of caregiver talk
1. Content: What gets talked about?
2. Prosody: What does motherese sound like?
3. Semantics and syntax: what about complexity?
4. Repetition: Say it or play it again
5. Negotiation of meaning: Huh?
6.. Participation-elicitors: Let's (keep) talk(ing)
7. Responsiveness
Issues about motherese
How long is motherese used
Motherese: Why?
Motherese: Immaterial or facilitative?
10 Interacting in ways that promote listening and talking
Introduction
The emotional impact of a child's hearing loss on the family
Adult learning
What parents need to learn
components of intervention for babies and young children with hearing loss
When to talk with your child and what to talk about
A framework for maximizing caregiver effectiveness in promoting auditory/linguistic development in children with hearing loss
Background and rationale
Structure of the framework
Getting a representative sample of interacting
Discussing the framework with parents
Ways of adressing parent-chosen targets
Instructional targets and sequence
Teaching through incidental and embellished interacting
Teaching through incidental interacting
Embellishing and incidental interaction
Teaching spoken language through embellished interacting
Teaching listening (audition) through embellished interacting
Teaching speech through embelilshed interacting
Preplanedd parent guidance sessions or auditory-verbal therapy sessions
Components to be accomplished in a typical preplanned session
Sample preplanned scenario
Substructure
About the benefits and limitations of preplanned teaching
What does the research say?
Appendix 1: hot to grow your baby's /child's brain
Appendix 2: Application and instructions for the Ling 6-7 sound test
Appendix 3: Targets for auditory/verbal learning
Appendix 4: Explanation for items on the framework
Appendix 5: checklist for evaluating preschool group settings for children with hearing loss who are learning spoken language
Appendix 6: Selected resources
Appendix 7: Description and practice of listening and spoken language spechialists: LSLS Cert. AVT and LSLS cert. AVEd
Appendix 8: Principles of LSLS practive
Appendix 9: Knowledge and competencies needed by listening and spoken language specialists (LSLSs)
Appendix 10: Listening and spoken language domains adressed in this book
Glossary
References
Index |
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