BACKGROUND
This study examined relationships between communicative participation and post-laryngectomy speech outcomes including: a) listener-rated speech intelligibility and acceptability; and b) patient-rated speech acceptability and voice handicap.
METHODS
Thirty-six laryngectomized individuals completed the Communicative Participation Item Bank short form and the Voice Handicap Index-10. They provided recordings from the Sentence Intelligibility Test (SIT) and a reading passage, and rated their own speech acceptability. Forty-eight inexperienced listeners transcribed the SIT sentences to derive intelligibility scores. Eighteen additional listeners judged speech acceptability using rating scales.
RESULTS
Listeners judged tracheoesophageal speakers significantly more intelligible and acceptable than electrolaryngeal speakers (p < .05). Speech acceptability was significantly more acceptable to speakers than listeners (p < .05). Weak, non-significant relationships were found between communicative participation and listener-rated outcomes. Stronger, significant relationships were found between communicative participation and self-rated speech acceptability and voice handicap (p < .05).
CONCLUSIONS
Patient-reported communication outcomes are complementary to listener-rated outcomes.
We test whether the composition and compensation of the board of directors are related to fraudulent corporate behavior. We use Accounting and Auditing Enforcement Releases from 2003 through 2010 to form a sample of 128 firms with violations and compare the characteristics of their boards to a matched sample of 128 control firms. SEC violations are less likely when the board has more women, independent members, and financial experts. Fraud is also less likely when director tenure is shorter and when the CEO is not the chair. Stock and especially stock option compensation are positively associated with SEC violations.
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I. INTRODUCTION
THE RELATIONSHIP between advertising and competition, in one manifestation or another, has been explored in dozens of empirical studies.' A subset of these studies has concentrated on advertising's effects on price in professional service markets (see Benham [1972], Cady [1976], and Kwoka[1984]), and one (Jacobs et al. [1984]) has dealt specifically with routine legal service markets, which is the subject of our study.2 The bulk of empirical evidence from this subset of studies supports the hypothesis that prices in professional service markets in which sellers advertise are lower, relative to costs, than they would be if such advertising were banned. One important mechanism through which this relationship can arise is the connection between advertising and sellers' individual demand elasticities.3
Our findings suggest that use of the electrolarynx as a postlaryngectomy method of verbal communication has a wide-ranging influence on self-perceived voice-related quality of life and that mean scores from prior studies may not accurately reflect the potential value of the electrolarynx. Communication disability related to electrolarynx use does in fact vary; however, it is not uniformly poor, and some may be highly proficient users. Consequently, the Voice-Related Quality of Life measure may also serve as a useful tool for clinical documentation of rehabilitation outcomes in those who use the electrolarynx as a postlaryngectomy method of speech.
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