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Byrd, Courtney T.; Conture, Edward G.; Ohde, Ralph N. – American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 2007
Purpose: To investigate the holistic versus incremental phonological encoding processes of young children who stutter (CWS; N = 26) and age- and gender-matched children who do not stutter (CWNS; N = 26) via a picture-naming auditory priming paradigm. Method: Children named pictures during 3 auditory priming conditions: neutral, holistic, and…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Phonology, Young Children, Phonological Awareness
Nippold, Marilyn A. – Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics, 2004
In the profession of speech-language pathology, it is commonly reported that children who stutter, as a group, are more likely to have phonological and language disorders than their non-stuttering peers. Some support for this belief comes from survey studies that have questioned speech-language pathologists about the children on their caseloads…
Descriptors: Stuttering, Speech Language Pathology, Communication Disorders, Language Impairments
Lickley, Robin J.; Hartsuiker, Robert J.; Corley, Martin; Russell, Melanie; Nelson, Ruth – Language and Speech, 2005
Two experiments used a magnitude estimation paradigm to test whether perception of disfluency is a function of whether the speaker and the listener stutter or do not stutter. Utterances produced by people who stutter were judged as "less fluent," and, critically, this held for apparently fluent utterances as well as for utterances…
Descriptors: Phonology, Auditory Perception, Stuttering, Computation