Holistic voice therapy approaches - 2: vocal function exercises, resonant voice therapy, Lee Silverman voice therapy
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Medical and surgical procedures in the treatment of benign vocal fold lesions: pharmaceutical effects on voice, phono surgery : re-innervation techniques, laryngeal framework surgeries, micro laryngeal excision
Post-operative care for benign vocal fold lesions disorders
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Documenting voice therapy outcomes
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Practicals (Voice and its Disorders)
10 Lessons
00:00:00 Hours
Record phonation and speaking samples (counting numbers) from five children, adult men, adult women, geriatric men and geriatric women. Note recording parameters and differences in material.
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Make inferences on age and sex differences across the samples obtained in the previous experiment using perceptual voice profiling. Make a note of differences in pitch, loudness, quality and voice control. Explain how voice reflects ones personality and o
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Perform an acoustic voice analysis on phonation sample and generate a voice report based on acoustic findings. Compare findings between men & women.
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Perform MPT and s/z ratio. Infer differences across age and sex.
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Perform spirometry or any other appropriate aerodynamic procedure. Infer differences across age and sex.
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Perform acoustic analysis on five abnormal voice samples
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Observe and document findings from five laryngeal examinations (pre-recorded or live) such as VLS, stroboscopy or any other relevant.
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Administer a PROM on five individuals.
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Prepare a vocal hygiene checklist.
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Demonstrate therapy techniques such as vocal function exercise, resonant voice therapy, digital manipulation, push pull, relaxation exercises.
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Speech sound acquisition and development
10 Lessons
00:00:00 Hours
Fundamentals of articulatory phonetics - phonetic description of vowels & consonants.
Methods to study speech sound acquisition – diary studies, cross sectional studies and longitudinal studies.
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Speech sound acquisition
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Acoustics of speech sounds
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Speech intelligibility, factors affecting speech intelligibility, assessment of speech intelligibility
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Co articulation: types and effects
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Phonological development in bilingual children.
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Phonological development in Indian languages.
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Assessment of speech sound disorders – I
7 Lessons
00:00:00 Hours
Current concepts in terminology and classification of speech sound disorders
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Factors related to speech sound disorders
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Introduction to assessment procedures: aims of assessment, screening and comprehensive assessment.
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Speech sound sampling procedures - issues related to single word and connected speech samples; imitation and spontaneous speech samples, contextual testing, recording of speech samples.
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Review of tests in English and other Indian languages - Single word articulation tests, deep articulation of articulation, and computerized tests of phonology.
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Influence of language and dialectal variations in assessment.
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Transcription of speech sample - transcription methods –IPA and extension of IPA; broad and narrow transcription.
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Assessment of speech sound disorders – II
10 Lessons
00:00:00 Hours
Introduction to independent and relational analysis.
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Independent analyses – phonetic inventory, phonemic inventory and phonotactic inventory (utility of independent analysis for analysis of speech of young children and children with severe speech sound disorders).
Determining the need for intervention – speech intelligibility and speech severity assessment.
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Factors influencing target selection – stimulability, frequency of occurrence, developmental appropriateness, contextual testing, and phonological process analysis.
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Case study – Documenting the assessment findings and determining the need for intervention.
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Management – I
10 Lessons
00:00:00 Hours
Basic considerations in therapy – target selection, basic framework for therapy, goalattack strategies, organizing therapy sessions, individual vs. group therapy.
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Treatment continuum – establishment, generalization and maintenance; measuring clinical change.
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Facilitation of generalization.
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Maintenance and termination from therapy.
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Motor-based treatment approaches – Principles of motor learning.
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Discrimination/ear training and sound contrast training.
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Establishing production of target sound – imitation, phonetic placement, successive approximation, context utilization.
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Traditional approach, contextual/sensory-motor approaches.
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General guidelines for motor-based treatment approaches.
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Use of technology in articulation correction.
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Management – II
10 Lessons
00:00:00 Hours
Core vocabulary approach.
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Introduction to linguistically-based treatment approaches- Distinctive feature therapy.
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Minimal pair contrasts therapy.
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Metaphon therapy, Cycles approach.
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Broad-based language approaches.
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General guidelines for linguistically-based approaches.
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Phonological awareness and phonological disorders.
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Phonological awareness intervention for preschool children.
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Adapting intervention approaches to individuals from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds.
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Role of family in intervention for speech sound disorders.
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Practicals (Speech Sound Disorders)
10 Lessons
00:00:00 Hours
List the vowels and consonants in your primary language and provide phonetic and acoustic descriptions for the speech sounds.
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Identify the vowels and consonants of your language on the IPA chart and practice the IPA symbols by transcribing 25 words.
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Make a list of minimal pairs (pairs of words which differ by only one phoneme) in English.
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Make a list of minimal pairs in any language other than English.
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Identify the stages of speech sound acquisition by observations from videos of children from birth to 5 years of age.
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Record the speech of a two year old typically developing child, transcribe and analyze the speech sample.
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Record the speech of one typically developing child from 3-5 years of age (include single word and connected speech samples), transcribe the sample, and perform phonological assessment.
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Analyze transcribed speech samples of typically developing children – practice independent and relational analysis.
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Practice instructions for phonetic placement of selected sounds.
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Develop a home plan with activities for any one section of phonological awareness in English and in one Indian language.
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Introduction to diagnostic audiology
7 Lessons
00:00:00 Hours
Characteristics of a diagnostic test, difference between screening and diagnostic test, functions of a diagnostic test in Audiology
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Need for test battery approach in auditory diagnosis and integration of results of audiological tests, cross-check principle
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Concept of sensitivity, specificity, true positive, true negative, false positive, false negative, hit rate
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Definition of behavioural and physiological tests and their characteristics in diagnostic audiology
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Theories and physiological bases of recruitment
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Theories and physiological bases of adaptation
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Clinical indications for cochlear pathology, retro-cochlear pathology, central auditory processing disorders, functional hearing loss, vestibular disorders
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Tests to identify cochlear and retro cochlear pathology
7 Lessons
00:00:00 Hours
ABLB, MLB and SISI tests
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Behavioural tests of adaptation
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Bekesy audiometry
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Brief tone audiometry
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PIPB function
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Glycerol test
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Test to identify dead regions of cochlea
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Tests to diagnose functional hearing loss
4 Lessons
00:00:00 Hours
Behavioural and clinical indicators of functional hearing loss
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Pure tone tests including tone in noise test, Stenger test, BADGE, puretone DAF
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Speech tests including Lombard test, Stenger test, lip-reading test, Doerfler-Stewert test, Low level PB word test, Yes-No test, DAF test
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Identification of functional hearing loss in children: Swinging story test, Pulse tone methods
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Assessment of central auditory processing
10 Lessons
00:00:00 Hours
Definition, different behavioral processes
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Behavioral and clinical indicators of central auditory processing disorders
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Bottle neck and subtlety principles and their implications in
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Tests to detect central auditory processing disorders
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Monaural low redundancy tests - filtered speech tests, time compressed speech test, speech-in-noise test, SSI with ICM, other monaural low redundancy tests.
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Dichotic speech tests – Dichotic digit test, Staggered spondaic word test, Dichotic CV test, SSI with CCM, Competing sentence test, other dichotic speech tests.
Routing of signals, head shadow/baffle/diffraction effects
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Output limiting and issues related to them: peak clipping, compression
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Concept and use of compression in hearing aids: BILL, TILL, PILL, Wide Dynamic Range Compression, Syllabic Compression, Dual Compression
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Signal processing in hearing aids – BILL, TILL, PILL
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Signal enhancing technology
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Noise reduction algorithms
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Extended low frequency amplification, frequency lowering technology (transposition, compression)
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Recent advances in hearing aids
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Electro-acoustic measurements for hearing aids
5 Lessons
00:00:00 Hours
Purpose and Parameters to be considered: OSPL90, SSPL90,HFA SSPL90, Gain, Full on Gain, HFA Full on Gain, Reference test Gain, Basic Frequency Response, Total Harmonic distortion, Intermodulation Distortion, input Output functions, instrumentation, proced
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Electro-acoustic measurements, BIS, IEC and ANSI standards
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Environmental tests.
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Care, maintenance and troubleshooting of hearing aids
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Counselling and orienting the hearing aid user (Client and significant others)
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Selection of hearing aids
5 Lessons
00:00:00 Hours
Pre-selection factors; Prescriptive and comparative procedures; Functional gain and insertion gain methods; Use of impedance, OAEs and AEPs audiometry; Hearing aids for conductive hearing loss; Hearing aids for children; Hearing aids for elderly; Selectio
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Hearing aid programming
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Methods for assessing hearing aid benefit
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Real ear insertion measurements for verification of hearing aid benefit: REIG, REUR, REAR, REOR, RESR, REIG, REAG, RECD
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Acoustic feedback in hearing aids
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Mechano-acoustic couplers (Ear molds)
5 Lessons
00:00:00 Hours
Different types of molds
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Procedure for hard molds and soft mold
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UV curing methods
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Special modifications in the ear molds: Vents (diagonal and parallel), deep canal molds, short canal, horns, Libby horn, reverse horn, acoustic modifier
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Effects of mechano-acoustic couplers on the hearing aid output
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Practicals (Amplification Devices)
11 Lessons
00:00:00 Hours
Listen to the output of different types and classes of hearing aids (monaural, binaural, analog, digital hearing aids), in different settings
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Troubleshoot hearing aids: Check the continuity of the receiver cord using multi meter, measure the voltage of different sized batteries using multi meter, Check voltage of batteries different types and sizes
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Carry out electroacoustic measurements for the body level and ear level hearing aids
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Program the hearing aid for different configuration and degrees of hearing loss (at least 5 different audiograms) using different prescriptive formulae e) Program the hearing aid for different listening situations (at least 3 different situations)
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Vary the compression settings in a digital hearing aid and note down the differences in the output
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Perform real ear insertion measurements using different hearing aids (body level and ear level, hearing aids of different gains)
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Compare speech perception through conventional BTE and RIC hearing aids using a rating scale
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Observe assistive listening devices such as telephone amplifier, vibro-tactile alarms, note down the candidacy and their utility.
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Administer a questionnaire to assess hearing aid benefit on 2 persons using hearing aids.
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Carry out a role play activity of counselling a hearing aid user
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Ear Molds
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Clinicals in Speech Language Pathology
2 Lessons
00:00:00 Hours
General considerations - Exposure is primarily aimed to be linked to the theory courses covered in the semester
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General considerations - After completion of clinical postings in Speech –language diagnostics, the student will know (concepts), know how (ability to apply), show (demonstrate in a clinical diary/log book based on clinical reports/recordings, etc), and d
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Clinicals in Audiology
2 Lessons
00:00:00 Hours
General considerations - Exposure is primarily aimed to be linked to the theory courses covered in the semester, however, not just limited to these areas.
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General considerations - After completion of clinical postings in auditory diagnostics and auditory rehabilitation, the student will Know (concept), know how (ability to apply), show (demonstrate in a clinical diary/log book), and do (perform on patients/
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