A PHONETIC AND PHONOLOGICAL STUDY OF SO-CALLED ‘BUCCAL’ SPEECH PRODUCED BY TWO LONG-TERM TRACHEOSTOMISED CHILDREN

Harveen Khaila1, Jill House2, Lesley Cavalli3 & Elizabeth Nash3
1City & Hackney Teaching PCT; 2Dept of Phonetics & Linguistics, UCL; 3Speech and Language Therapy Dept, Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH)

ID 1476
[full paper]

Analysis of the ‘buccal’ speech spontaneously developed by two long-term tracheostomised children reveals speaker-specific strategies for setting air in motion, for generating a source of sound to replace normal voice, and for articulating vowels and consonants. The implications for communicating phonological contrasts are discussed.