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Hubbard, Carol P. – Journal of Communication Disorders, 1998
This study examined interjudge agreement levels for five adult listeners assessing either overt stuttering or disfluency types in the spontaneous speech of eight young children. Results showed that the interjudge reliability for judgments based on a disfluency taxonomy was not significantly different from that based on stuttering. The importance…
Descriptors: Interrater Reliability, Phonology, Speech Evaluation, Speech Impairments
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Yairi, Ehud; And Others – Journal of Communication Disorders, 1996
Preliminary findings from a longitudinal study of 32 preschool children who stutter and 32 nonstuttering controls reveal 4 subgroups: (1) persistent stuttering; (2) late recovery; (3) early recovery; and (4) control. Comparative data for the groups regarding frequency of disfluency, acoustic features, phonologic skills, language development,…
Descriptors: Classification, Disability Identification, Longitudinal Studies, Predictor Variables
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Hall, Kelly Dailey; Amir, Ofer; Yairi, Ehud – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 1999
This investigation compared changes in articulatory rate over a period of 2 years in subgroups of preschool children who stutter (either persistently or who recovered without intervention) and normally fluent children. Results indicated no significant differences among the three groups when articulation rate was measured in syllables per second,…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Longitudinal Studies, Phonemics, Preschool Children
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Cordes, Anne K. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2000
In this study, 30 judges identified disfluency types they perceived in audiovisually recorded speech stimuli, first individually and then with a partner. Although intrapair and interpair agreement was higher in the partner than the individual condition, agreement for occurrences still averaged below 50 percent. Findings suggest caution in use of…
Descriptors: Adults, Evaluation Methods, Interrater Reliability, Speech Acts
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Max, Ludo; Gracco, Vincent L. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2005
This work investigated whether stuttering and nonstuttering adults differ in the coordination of oral and laryngeal movements during the production of perceptually fluent speech. This question was addressed by completing correlation analyses that extended previous acoustic studies by others as well as inferential analyses based on the…
Descriptors: Stuttering, Adults, Psychomotor Skills, Acoustics
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Onslow, Mark – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2006
Background: The development of evidence-based practice, which is increasingly popular in stuttering treatment, is closely linked to the development of outcome measures. Aims: Two approaches to the development of stuttering treatment outcome measures are outlined. The first is the deductive, top-down approach, where the development of specific…
Descriptors: Stuttering, Outcomes of Treatment, Anxiety, Logical Thinking
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Bloodstein, O. – Journal of Communication Disorders, 2006
This article suggests a possible link between incipient stuttering and early difficulty in language formulation. The hypothesis offers a unifying explanation of an array of empirical observations. Among these observations are the following: early stuttering occurs only on the first word of a syntactic structure; stuttering does not appear to be…
Descriptors: Stuttering, Hypothesis Testing, Syntax, Language Acquisition
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Godinho, Tara; Ingham, Roger J.; Davidow, Jason; Cotton, John – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2006
Purpose: Previous research has demonstrated the fluency-improving effect of reducing the occurrence of short-duration, phonated intervals (PIs; approximately 30-150 ms) in individuals who stutter, prompting the hypothesis that PIs in these individuals' speech are not distributed normally, particularly in the short PI ranges. It has also been…
Descriptors: Intervals, Phonetics, Speech, Stuttering
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Harrington, Jonathan – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1988
Models of stuttering and delayed auditory feedback propose that, in these conditions, the rhythmic structure of fluent speech prespecifing the intervals between vowels of stressed syllables is lacking and that auditory perception of vowels of stressed syllables is predicted incorrectly. A model regarding onset of stuttering in children is also…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Child Development, Feedback, Language Rhythm
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Conture, Edward G.; And Others – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1986
A study compared the laryngeal behavior associated with the perceptually fluent speech of 3-to-7-year-old stutterers (N=8) to that of normally fluent peers (N=8). Analysis of electroglottograph readings indicated that normally fluent children exhibited significantly more typical patterns during consonant-vowel and vowel-consonant transitions than…
Descriptors: Consonants, Electronic Equipment, Language Fluency, Stuttering
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Runyan, Charles M.; Runyan, Sara Elizabeth – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 1986
The "fluency rules" therapy program for young children who stutter consists of seven rules designed to teach children about the physiologic concepts associated with fluent speech production. Pilot testing with nine children (three- to seven-years-old) demonstrated its effectiveness in producing fluent speech and maintaining fluency for a…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Physiology, Program Effectiveness, Speech Habits
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Cecconi, Christine P. – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1977
The study assessed the effect of increasing the difficulty of reading material on the frequency and type of disfluency in the oral reading of 80 normally fluent elementary school children. Results indicated a significant increase in total moments of disfluency and four specific types of disfluency as the difficulty of reading material increased.…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Elementary Education, Language Fluency, Reading Difficulty
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Timmons, Beverly A.; Boudreau, James P. – Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1978
Twenty-five male stutterers and 25 male non-stutterers (mean age 9 years) read or recited under conditions of normal and delayed auditory feedback to determine the correlation between disfluencies in speech and normal or delayed feedback. (Author/PHR)
Descriptors: Feedback, Language Research, Males, Responses
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Stager, Sheila V.; Ludlow, Christy L. – Journal of Communication Disorders, 1998
Voicing onset changes between control conditions and three fluency-evoking conditions (choral reading, delayed auditory feedback, and noise) were studied in 10 individuals who stutter and in 12 controls. Results indicate that although fluency-evoking conditions modified some voicing-onset behaviors, these modifications did not relate to…
Descriptors: Adults, Environmental Influences, Intervention, Language Fluency
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Finn, Patrick – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1996
This study examined a validation procedure combining self-reports with independent verification to identify cases of recovery from stuttering without formal treatment. A Speech Behavior Checklist was administered to 42 individuals familiar with recovered subjects' past speech. Analysis of subjects' descriptions of their past stuttering was…
Descriptors: Check Lists, Self Evaluation (Individuals), Speech Evaluation, Speech Skills
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