The University of Sheffield
Department of Human Communication Sciences

Professor Sara Howard, BA, BSc, MA, PhD, MRCSLT.

Sara Howard

Department of Human Communication Sciences
The University of Sheffield
31 Claremont Crescent
Sheffield
S10 2TA
UK



Tel: +44 (0) 114 222 2448
Fax: +44 (0) 114 273 0547

email : s.howard@sheffield.ac.uk

Biography

Sara Howard is Professor of Clinical Phonetics and currently also an ESRC Research Fellow. After BA and MA degrees in English and Linguistics at the University of Leeds, she took a BSc in Speech & Language Therapy at Leeds Metropolitan University and then a PhD in Clinical Phonetics at Sheffield.

Publications include: Case Studies in Clinical Linguistics (Whurr, 1995) and New Directions in Language Development and Disorders (Kluwer, 2000) (both co-edited with Mick Perkins) and The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics (Blackwell, 2008) (co-edited with Martin Ball, Mick Perkins and Nicole Müller). Her most recent book, co-edited with Anette Lohmander, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm – is "Cleft Palate Speech: Assessment and Intervention" (2011, Wiley-Blackwell. Sara has published and presented widely in the area of clinical phonetics and phonology and is President of the International Association of Clinical Phonetics & Linguistics.

Research interests

Sara Howard´s main research interests lie in the area of the phonetics/phonology interface in developmental speech impairments (especially cleft lip and palate). She is particularly interested in the relationship between perceptual and instrumental analyses of speech production and speech impairment, and in the complementary analytic techniques of narrow phonetic transcription and electropalatography (EPG). She has used these approaches to investigate:

Professional activities

Collaborators

Selected publications

  1. Ball, M. J., Perkins, M. R., Mueller, N, & Howard, S. J. (eds) (2008) The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics. Oxford: Blackwell.
  2. Howard, S. J. (2007) The interplay between articulation and prosody in children with impaired speech: observations from electropalatography and perceptual analysis. Advances in Speech-Language Pathology, 9(1), 20-35.
  3. Howard, S.J. (2004) Connected Speech Processes in Developmental Speech Impairment: Observations from an Electropalatographic Perspective, Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 18, 6-8, 407-417.
  4. Howard, S.J. (2004) Compensatory articulatory behaviours in adolescents with cleft palate: Comparing the perceptual and instrumental evidence, Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 18, 5, 313-340.
  5. Howard, S.J. & Heselwood, B. (2002) Learning and teaching phonetic transcription for clinical purposes, Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics, 16, 371-401.