“…This technique has been used as a diagnostic assessment tool, for recording and analysing tongue contact patterns for sounds produced in the alveolar, post-alveolar, palatal and velar place of articulation (Friel, 1998;Gibbon, Dent, & Hardcastle, 1993;Gibbon, Hardcastle, & Dent, 1995). As a therapy tool, EPG has been used to target a range of speech production difficulties, including articulation/phonological disorders in children and young adults (Dagenais, 1995;Gibbon, McNeill, Wood, & Watson, 2003;Hardcastle, Gibbon, & Scobbie, 1995). It has been used increasingly to treat articulation/phonological disorders in children and adults with cleft palate (Whitehill, Stokes, & Man, 1996;Gibbon, Crampin, Hardcastle, Nairn, Razzell, Harvey, & Reynolds, 1998).…”