Hello Please could you help me? I am struggling to pronounce even my native language correctly. For example, when I say "thing," it comes out sounding like "king" or "timg." Similarly, "car" often sounds like "tar" when I try to say it. This has been a challenge for me since birth, and now that I'm 18, i don't know why this happens may be i am lazy to pronounce or i just can't.And also,there are no specialists or professionals nearby who can help. I'm not sure what steps to take to improve my pronunciation, especially since surgery or other interventions aren't available options. Thank you.
I have the same problem of my dog activating the record message!! I don't know if she hits too hard or something, but it's so annoying! We have stopped trying to use them because it happened too often and it got really annoying.
The importance of the organs of articulations 18.03.2024 Each organ of speech or articulator plays a special and crucial role in the production of speech sounds. These speech sounds ease communication in human beings. The tongue, lips, teeth, lungs, vocal cords, velum, soft and hard palate, larynx, pharynx are important articulators in human communication. These include the lips, teeth, mouth, tongue and larynx. The larynx or voice box is the basis for all the sounds we produce. It modified the airflow to produce different frequencies of sound. Articulation is important to be able to produce sounds, words and sentences which are clear and can be easily understood and interpreted by others in order to be able to express basic needs and wants, right through to being able to engage in complex conversations. An organ which is most important articulator of speech is the tongue. The tongue is the most important articulator of speech. This muscle is extremely strong, as it must move food around in our mouths as we chew. However, the organs that help in sound production is the larynx or voice box, located in the throat of human body, and solely responsible for the production of sound. Since sound can only be produced due to vibration, larynx is provided with two vocal cords which are separated by a narrow slit for the passage of air. What are the 8 speech organs? The function of the eight parts of human speech organs Lips, Teeth, Tongue, Uvula, Glottis, Alveolar Ridge, Alveolar Ridge, Hard Palate, and Velum (Soft Palate) Lips form different shapes, s…3 Mar 2016 Do the organs have more functions? Most parts or organs of the body perform multiple functions so as the organs of speech. The eye is used for vision but it also perceives depth. The nose is used for breathing but it also smells, and is used to get rid of mucus. The kidneys regulate blood pressure as well as detoxify the blood.
This is an awesome video. Are you planning a longer video about the quadrant and the sounds? I wish you would. Are you available on any online platforms for training?
have you considered adding a subtle pallet of scents to each individual selection? is smell not more dominant than visual acuity/processing for a dog? you could link the scents to the items themselves, some fresh grass and leaves for the go for walk, whatever. There must be a way to find or make a scent-permeable material that holds odors without being unsanitary...
VISUAL EXAMPLES would have helped as in words and phrases to differentiate between the two disorders. I appreciate the video though and the thorough explanations! Thanks.
This channel is very helpful.please try to post more speech related videos.other channels gives vague information but you give precise information neither more nor less
For the larger foam tiles, the problem is that they slide on the ground and your dog don't find that "stable". Buy a thin but semi-rigid carpet or other large appropriate surface that WON'T slide. Buy velcro strips, the widest you can find. Even better, velcro sheets that you simply cut to the wanted sizes. Glue the velcro strips to the "carpet" and the back of the tiles. Keep the overall hexagonal shape layout, and thus, you get tiles that won't slide or move away. Assume your dog will eventually learn LOTS of words, so prepare a big enough "carpet" area, and make sure the dog has a VERY easy all-around access to all the switches. Front-row + back-row of switches all disposed against a wall, that is a very weak layout. The middle of living room is much better, even if you have to sacrifice the space for the coffee table. For pictures, dogs are bichromic, they see only in blue and yellow. Thus for dogs red greens browns and greys all look the same. Thus, red and green balls look great too us, but will ordinary and much less "contrasting" for dogs. Bright reds and greens particularly, are like trying to read pale grey text over white paper. Not the best. Seek more neon blues ad yellows to catch their attention better. Research has shown that abstract symbols that for us are "obviously" easily representing something, might be quite harder to interpret for animals than simple true color photographs of the thing itself (removing all background). Essentially abstract icons act more like just an extra set of symbols to learn. It might work fine for complex ideas, but for everyday stuff say associating "Mom" with directly your photo will work just fine. For example humans interpret the meaning behind an "arrow" very easily. Not so much for a dog, a pointing finger might be better. Also, dogs tend to see the world less in terms of what is an object around them, and more in terms of that object's *dynamic movement* (where it's going) and what he will do with it. It's more "action oriented", so choosing more words that allow them to better express their unique "dog mindset" might help. Also, don't always make every button leading to good things. Focus on letting him express himself, and interacting and reacting appropriately, much less (if at all) on giving treats simply for pushing "the right" button, because then he'll just push and push until he hits the right one by pure luck, and his motivation won't be to understand how they work and communicate, but just too get treats. It is SUPER easy to let your own human perception confirmation bias make you think the dog is a genius and that he definitely understood it right, and to rationalize and "ignore" all the times he didn't. Also, don't make all buttons MEAN good things. Letting him express bad stuff too "SAD", "HURT", etc. is important, and some buttons should be there for YOU to communicate to him even though he himself will VERY rarely use them.
Can you only work on one sound at a time when doing the traditional motor approach? Or can you group 3 sounds together and work on one sound each session?
Hello, I know you put this video up almost a year ago. If Kion or anyone elses pets are having trouble with the mats or buttons, some things you can do are: present them as much as possible, if possible leave them out all the time. They don't have to be anywhere near the buttons but the goal is to show him that they exist and aren't going to hurt him in anyway. Once they are comfortable with the mats, you can slowly transition them towards the buttons. Also, pairing the mats with reinforcement. Start with a treat around them, where ever Kion is comfortable. That could be 6 ft away or 6 inches away. Then slowly place the treats closer and closer, then on the mats. Maybe even only having 1 mat at a time out. Basically pair them with lots of reinforcement and very slow introductions to the mat. It could take days or weeks for your pets to feel comfortable. Hope this helps anyone having trouble with the buttons or mats!
Interesting video here (ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Gvg242U2YfQ.html) on how dogs hear + see (only in blue + yellow). Doesn't seem like the little images/pictures would be that important. I think that's more for human use. Maybe black + white patterns and shapes like they use for babies? Strips, dots, zig-zags, etc. Also, thinking that you could make your own pads, either with carpet tiles or those foam interlocking tiles and use dbl sided tape to stick them in place. Just use a utility knife to cut out openings for buttons. Kion's sharp, and you're doing great keeping up him.
3:46 This isn’t correct. [ʒ] and [ʃ] are of course postalveolar sounds, not palatal ones. The tongue doesn’t slide back after the plosive release. I suppose there might be a realization of the postalveolar affricates as alveolo-palatal [t̠ɕ] and [d̠ʑ] in some accent, but that’s certainly not standard for most Americans. Affrication of coronal plosives preceding /ɹ/ and especially /j/ is sometimes called palatalization, but English affricates are not really palatal (unless you want to argue that /ki/ is sometimes realized a bit like [cçi]).
This was very informative, thank you. I have a pateint who can understand what is being said but has trouble forming the words he wants to speak. We think the traditional motor approach might help him. Can you please post a video explaining that process. That will be really helpful.
Great vid, I appreciate it. I'm an adult, and I suspect that I may have a phonological disorder. I could be wrong, but based on what you're saying this may be my issue. I have struggled to talk my entire life. I've always felt like I'm not speaking correctly, although my sentence structure is correct. Often times when I tell jokes, people don't find it funny, although the content and structure of my humor is golden. I have heard people tell the same jokes and others will laugh. Many times I will say the same words in different tones under the same situation. I have a difficult time knowing if what I'm saying has been perceived properly by my audience and I usually gauge their reaction, which is typically bland. In some cases I could be monotoned even though I am excited. Many times I'm scared to talk because of how I sound, which has created social anxiety. The social anxiety has made my voice even worse under social situation. There's even times I've noticed that I will have random high pitched or low pitches randomly in my verbiage. Does this sound like I could have a phonemic issue? If so, what would be a treatment option for adults with what I present with? Thank you in advance for your reply. 😃
Hello miss your video is brilliant. I have a question How do we describe the short A and the long schwa when it comes to advancement and how high the tongue is? thanks in advance
Late thought re "does not like the back buttons" - perhaps if the buttons were not against the wall? If he could move "all around" the buttons that might make them all of equal "ease"? This video was a while back, maybe you solved this already.
You have a lovely teaching method! Thank you! This information is so important I really want to understand it. I just really want to be an SLP, and school is so hard. I listen to extra study helpers in the shower.
It would be great to have an app for the conversation partner to model how to use it! That is such a great idea and I think you're on to something! Also, 2010!? Wow, iPads and AAC are basically growing up together 😊