Prof. Shelley L. Velleman PH.D., CCC-SLP
Speech-Language Pathologist
489 MAIN ST BURLINGTON VT, 05405About
Dr. Shelley Velleman is a speech language pathologist practicing in BURLINGTON, VT. Dr. Velleman specializes in speech, language and swallowing disorders in patients. As a speech language pathologist, Dr. Velleman evaluates, diagnoses and treats patients with communication and swallowing troubles. These conditions may be due to developmental delay, brain injury, hearing loss, autism, stroke or other diseases and injuries. Dr. Velleman helps patients make sounds and improve their voices through various methods. Speech language pathologists also work with patients to strengthen muscles used to speak and swallow, and work with individuals and families to help cope with their conditions.
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Metrical analysis of the speech of children with suspected developmental apraxia of speech.
- The construction of a first phonology.
- More crosslinguistic evidence on fillers in the late single-word period.
- Phonotactic therapy.
- Phonological processes in Kannada-speaking adolescents with Down syndrome.
- Through the magnifying glass: Underlying literacy deficits and remediation potential in childhood apraxia of speech.
- Lexical and phonological development in children with childhood apraxia of speech--a commentary on Stoel-Gammon's 'Relationships between lexical and phonological development in young children'.
- Differentiating Speech Sound Disorders From Phonological Dialect Differences: Implications for Assessment and Intervention.
- Children with Williams Syndrome: Language, Cognitive, and Behavioral Characteristics and their Implications for Intervention.
- Children with 7q11.23 Duplication Syndrome: Speech, Language, Cognitive, and Behavioral Characteristics and their Implications for Intervention.
- Whole-Word Phonology and Templates: Trap, Bootstrap, or Some of Each?
- Joint attention and oromotor abilities in young children with and without autism spectrum disorder.
- The interaction of phonetics and phonology in developmental verbal dyspraxia: two case studies.
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