James L Coyle SLP
Speech-Language Pathologist
203 LOTHROP ST PITTSBURGH PA, 15213About
Dr. James Coyle is a speech language pathologist practicing in PITTSBURGH, PA. Dr. Coyle specializes in speech, language and swallowing disorders in patients. As a speech language pathologist, Dr. Coyle 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. Coyle 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- Cervical auscultation synchronized with images from endoscopy swallow evaluations.
- The effects of increased fluid viscosity on swallowing sounds in healthy adults.
- Understanding differences between healthy swallows and penetration-aspiration
- A comparative analysis of swallowing accelerometry and sounds during saliva swallows.
- A comparative analysis of DBSCAN, K-means, and quadratic variation algorithms for automatic identification of swallows from swallowing accelerometry signals.
- Characteristics of Dry Chin-Tuck Swallowing Vibrations and Sounds.
- Characterizing functional connectivity patterns during saliva swallows in different head positions.
- Dysphagia Screening: Contributions of Cervical Auscultation Signals and Modern Signal-Processing Techniques.
- Decoding human swallowing via electroencephalography: a state-of-the-art review.
- A statistical analysis of cervical auscultation signals from adults with unsafe airway protection.
- A Matched Dual-Tree Wavelet Denoising for Tri-Axial Swallowing Vibrations.
- Anatomical Directional Dissimilarities in Tri-axial Swallowing Accelerometry Signals.
- Functional connectivity patterns of normal human swallowing: difference among various viscosity swallows in normal and chin-tuck head positions.
- The effects of compressive sensing on extracted features from tri-axial swallowing accelerometry signals.
- Differences in brain networks during consecutive swallows detected using an optimized vertex-frequency algorithm.
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