List of FiguresNotes on ContributorsIntroductionThe EditorsPart I Pragmatics, Discourse, and Sociolinguistics1. Discourse Analysis and Communication DisordersLouise Keegan, Jacqueline A. Guendouzi & Nicole Müller2. Conversational Implicature and Communication DisordersFrancesca Foppolo & Greta Mazzaggio3. Relevance Theory and Communication AtypicalitiesElly Ifantidou & Tim Wharton4. NeuropragmaticsValentina Bambini, Luca Bischetti & Federico Frau5. Pragmatic Impairment as an Emergent PhenomenonMichael R. Perkins & Jamie Azios6. Conversation Analysis and Communication DisordersRay Wilkinson7. Clinical SociolinguisticsBrent Archer, Eleanor Gulick, Jack Damico & Martin J. Ball,8. Systemic Functional Linguistics and Communication DisorderLiz Spencer & Alison Ferguson9. Multimodal Analysis of InteractionScott Barnes & Francesco Possemato10. Cross-Linguistic and Multilingual Perspectives on Communicative Competence and Communication Impairment: Pragmatics, Discourse, and SociolinguisticsZhu Hua & Li Wei11. Clinical Corpus LinguisticsDavida Fromm & Brian MacWhinneyPart II Syntax and Semantics12. Generative Syntactic Theory and Language DisordersMartina Penke and Eva Wimmer13. Formulaic Sequences and Language DisorderAlison Wray14. Syntactic Processing in Developmental and Acquired Language DisordersTheodoros Marinis15. Inflectional Morphology and Language DisorderMartina Penke16. Normal and Impaired Semantic Processing of WordsYves Joanette, Maximiliano Wilson & Marilyne Joyal17. Neural Correlates of Neurotypical and Pathological Language ProcessingSonja A. Kotz, Stefan Frisch, & Angela D. Friederici18. Developmental Language Disorder in a Bilingual ContextJan de Jong19. Cross-Linguistic Perspectives on Morphosyntax in Child Language DisordersStanislava Antonijevic-Elliott & Natalia Meir20. The complex relationship between cognition & language: illustrations from acquiredaphasiaLyndsey Nickels, Bruna Tessaro, Solene Hameau, & Christos Salis21. Linguistic and Motoric Disorders in the Sign ModalityMartha TyronePart III Phonology22. Phonology and Clinical PhonologyElena Even-Simkin23. Constraints-Based Nonlinear Phonological Theoriesin Clinical PhonologyJoseph P. Stemberger, Barbara M. H. Bernhardt, Glenda Mason & Daniel Bérubé24. Articulatory Phonology and Speech ImpairmentChristina Hagedorn & Aravind Namasivayam25. Government Phonology and Speech ImpairmentMartin J. Ball & Ben Rutter26. A Usage-based Approach to Clinical PhonologyAnna V. Sosa & Joan L. Bybee27. Typical and Nontypical Phonological DevelopmentMichelle Pascoe28. Vowel Development and DisordersKaren Pollock & Carol Stoel-Gammon29. Cross-Linguistic Phonological AcquisitionDavid Ingram & Elena Babatsouli30. Cross-linguistic aspects of system and structure in clinical phonologyMehmet Yavas & Margaret Kehoe31. Connected SpeechCaroline Newton, Sara Howard, Bill Wells & John Local32. Clinical Phonology and Phonological AssessmentBarbara Dodd, Alison Holm & Sharon CrosbiePart IV Phonetics33. Phonetic Transcription in Clinical PracticeSally Bates, Jocelynne Watson, Barry Heselwood & Sara Howard34. Instrumental Analysis of Speech ProductionLucie Menard and Mark Tiede35. Instrumental Analysis of ArticulationYunjung Kim, Raymond D. Kent & Austin Thompson36. Instrumental Analysis of VoiceMeike Brockmann-Bauser37. Measures of Speech PerceptionJan Wouters, Robin Gransier & Astrid van Wieringen38. NeurophoneticsWolfram Ziegler, Ingrid Aichert, Theresa Schölderle & Anja Staiger39. Coarticulation and Speech ImpairmentIvana Didirková40. Prosodic ImpairmentsBill Wells & Traci Walker41. Speech IntelligibilityJulie Liss42. Sociophonetics and Clinical LinguisticsGerard Docherty & Ghada KhattabIndex
Martin J. Ball is Honorary Professor at Prifysgol Bangor University, Wales, and former Professor of Speech-Language Pathology at Linköping University, Sweden. He has published many field-defining works and is a renowned scholar of clinical linguistics and Celtic languages.Nicole Müller is Professor of Speech and Hearing Sciences in the School of Clinical Therapies at University College Cork, Ireland. She has published widely in the fields of clinical linguistics and speech and language pathology.Elizabeth Spencer is Senior Lecturer of Speech Pathology at the University of Newcastle, Australia. She currently studies the effects of aging on language and performs discourse analysis within the field of speech pathology.