I've not seen SI produce results that I could attribute specifically to it
either in speech or audiology. Having said that, movement of various sorts has
been used as therapy since at least as far back as Chainy in the '60s and
earlier. That didn't pan out very well but you never know. The idea behind SI
is a neat one but I tend to think I'm seeing more effects from therapist
interaction and environmental change than from SI itself. I do agree that some
large scale studies done by other than SI practitioners would be excellent.
Even if SI doesn't work, the interactions obviously do and that's just plain
good therapy no matter what title you put on it.
Tom
Tom Brennan KD5VIJ, CCC-A/SLP
web page http://titan.sfasu.edu/~g_brennantg/sonicpage.html
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