L. Archer. J Speech Hear Disord, 42 (4):
568--579(November 1977)
Abstract
Until recently, speech-language pathologists have shown little interest in seeking alternate forms of communication when functional verbal communication is not attainable. There is a paucity of literature dealing with nonverbal communication systems for people lacking functional verbal communication for reasons other than deafness. Blissymbolics is a logical, visual language that has provided functional communication for nonverbal cerebral-palsied children. The full potential and application of Blissymbolics has only begun to be realized, and there is much need for experimentation and research. This paper describes the system and suggests areas for future application and development.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Archer1977
%A Archer, L. A.
%D 1977
%J J Speech Hear Disord
%K Cerebral Palsy; Child; Child, Preschool; Education, Special; Humans; Language; Language Development; Mental Retardation; Nonverbal Communication
%N 4
%P 568--579
%T Blissymbolics-a nonverbal communication system.
%V 42
%X Until recently, speech-language pathologists have shown little interest in seeking alternate forms of communication when functional verbal communication is not attainable. There is a paucity of literature dealing with nonverbal communication systems for people lacking functional verbal communication for reasons other than deafness. Blissymbolics is a logical, visual language that has provided functional communication for nonverbal cerebral-palsied children. The full potential and application of Blissymbolics has only begun to be realized, and there is much need for experimentation and research. This paper describes the system and suggests areas for future application and development.
@article{Archer1977,
abstract = {Until recently, speech-language pathologists have shown little interest in seeking alternate forms of communication when functional verbal communication is not attainable. There is a paucity of literature dealing with nonverbal communication systems for people lacking functional verbal communication for reasons other than deafness. Blissymbolics is a logical, visual language that has provided functional communication for nonverbal cerebral-palsied children. The full potential and application of Blissymbolics has only begun to be realized, and there is much need for experimentation and research. This paper describes the system and suggests areas for future application and development.},
added-at = {2014-07-19T17:42:22.000+0200},
author = {Archer, L. A.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2f15519d548dec2b9edcf616e1ccd59d9/ar0berts},
groups = {public},
interhash = {3beb3e7f168fdae632163a5e5bade509},
intrahash = {f15519d548dec2b9edcf616e1ccd59d9},
journal = {J Speech Hear Disord},
keywords = {Cerebral Palsy; Child; Child, Preschool; Education, Special; Humans; Language; Language Development; Mental Retardation; Nonverbal Communication},
month = Nov,
number = 4,
pages = {568--579},
pmid = {916650},
timestamp = {2014-07-19T17:42:22.000+0200},
title = {Blissymbolics-a nonverbal communication system.},
username = {ar0berts},
volume = 42,
year = 1977
}