| |
 |
| Posted by admin on Friday, October 01 @ 09:28:25 CDT (3205 reads) |
|
 |
 |
 |
LIVING AND WORKING WITH A CENTRAL AUDITORY PROCESSING DISORDER (CAPD) Judith W. Paton, M. A., Audiologist The easiest, quickest way to communicate is simply to say something and then deal with the other person's reply, right? Right, unless your listener has a CAPD (Central Auditory Processing Disorder), then your remark might come through with certain words drowned out by other noises, or with some words sounding like different words or as meaningless strings of verbiage. You might begin to suspect this when the other person's expression doesn't register understanding, or if he,"answers the wrong question," or he asks you for additional information which most people would have been able to infer from what you just said. |
|
 |
 |
| |
|