Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Richard: Is this where you learned about melodic intonation therapy?
Based on this intriguing tendency, Melodic intonation therapy was developed.
The traditional melodic intonation therapy process is divided into four progressive stages.
The majority of research in melodic intonation therapy has been conducted with aphasia patients.
The following sections will describe both the adult and child models of melodic intonation therapy.
Non-invasive brain stimulation enhances the effects of melodic intonation therapy.
Melodic intonation therapy has been shown to work particularly well in patients with large lesions in the left hemisphere.
To help this memory problem, a strategy similar to melodic intonation therapy is applied, and patients rehearse the list of words embedded in the song.
Melodic intonation therapy: Variations on a theme.
Melodic intonation therapy with young children with apraxia.
Melodic intonation therapy is often used to treat non-fluent aphasia and has proved to be very effective in some cases.
Today, melodic intonation therapy is commonly used with patients suffering from non-fluent aphasia and apraxia of speech.
That's how it was for about a year or so until we started using music and then through melodic intonation therapy I was able to sing myself.
Melodic intonation therapy is not appropriate for patients suffering form receptive aphasia or brain damage affecting the patient's ability to read and comprehend language.
Yet, a number of questions regarding the effectiveness of melodic intonation therapy remain unresolved (for an extensive review, see Stahl, 2013).
Recovery from nonfluent aphasia after melodic intonation therapy: A PET study.
Melodic intonation therapy contains two essential components of melodic singing and rhythmic tapping of each syllable.
A study of the effectiveness of an adaptation of melodic intonation therapy in increasing the communicative speech of young children with Down syndrome.
Melodic intonation therapy was inspired by the observation that individuals with non-fluent aphasia sometimes can sing words or phrases that they normally cannot speak.
Melodic intonation therapy is used by music therapists, board-certified professionals that use music as a therapeutic tool to effect certain non-musical outcomes in their patients.
Melodic intonation therapy (MIT) is a commonly used method of treating aphasias, particularly those involving speech deficits (as opposed to reading or writing).
Melodic intonation therapy (MIT) has been pursued for some years with aphasic patients under the belief that it helps stimulate the ability to speak normally.
Melodic intonation therapy (MIT): Utilizes client's unimpaired ability to sing to facilitate spontaneous and voluntary speech.
The efficacy of melodic intonation therapy has been proven by studies that show that MIT can result in greater recovery when compared to non-intonation therapy.
Now with this melodic intonation therapy, and this is a little complicated, it all has to do, the left side and the right side of the brain, right?