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Morrish, Taryn; Nesbitt, Amy; le Roux, Mia; Zsilavecz, Ursula; van der Linde, Jeannie – Communication Disorders Quarterly, 2017
Research involving stuttering in multilingual individuals is limited. Speech-language therapists face the challenge of treating a diverse client base, which includes multilingual individuals. The aim of this study was to examine the stuttering moments across English, Afrikaans, and German in a multilingual speaker. A single multilingual adult with…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Stuttering, Multilingualism, Case Studies
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Karimi, Hamid; O'Brian, Sue; Onslow, Mark; Jones, Mark – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2014
Purpose: Percentage of syllables stuttered (%SS) and severity rating (SR) scales are measures in common use to quantify stuttering severity and its changes during basic and clinical research conditions. However, their reliability has not been assessed with indices measuring both relative and absolute reliability. This study was designed to provide…
Descriptors: Reliability, Syllables, Stuttering, Severity (of Disability)
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Chon, HeeCheong; Kraft, Shelly Jo; Zhang, Jingfei; Loucks, Torrey; Ambrose, Nicoline G. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2013
Purpose: Delayed auditory feedback (DAF) is known to induce stuttering-like disfluencies (SLDs) and cause speech rate reductions in normally fluent adults, but the reason for speech disruptions is not fully known, and individual variation has not been well characterized. Studying individual variation in susceptibility to DAF may identify factors…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Adults, Speech, Individual Differences
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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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Ingham, Roger J.; Cordes, Anne K. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 1997
Stuttering self-judgments from 15 adults who stutter, judgments of each others' stuttering, and the judgments of a panel of 10 stuttering researchers were compared. Results found substantial differences in stuttering judgments across speakers, judges, and judgment conditions, but across-task comparisons were complicated by low self-agreement among…
Descriptors: Adults, Interrater Reliability, Measurement Techniques, Self Evaluation (Individuals)
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Ingham, Roger J.; And Others – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1995
Four experienced stuttering researchers viewed videodisks of spontaneous speech from chronic stutterers and attempted to locate the precise onset and offset of individual stuttering events. Results showed interjudge disagreements that challenge the reliability and validity of onset and offset judgments. Highly agreed stuttering events were…
Descriptors: Adults, Clinical Diagnosis, Evaluation Problems, Interrater Reliability
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O'Brian, Sue; Packman, Ann; Onslow, Mark; O'Brian, Nigel – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2004
This study investigated the comparative reliability of 2 stuttering measurement tools when used by experienced judges: percentage of syllables stuttered (%SS) and a 9-point severity scale (SEV). The study also investigated the degree to which scores on 1 tool predict scores on the other and the distributions of stuttering when measured by these…
Descriptors: Severity (of Disability), Rating Scales, Interrater Reliability, Stuttering
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Lewis, Kerry E. – American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 1995
An examination of the extent to which scores on the Stuttering Severity Instrument (SSI) for Children and Adults, Third Edition, accurately reflect 10 judges' observations of stuttering behaviors found that SSI scores obscured the wide range of judges' raw counts and did not accurately reflect the observational data from which they were derived.…
Descriptors: Adults, Children, Evaluation Methods, Interrater Reliability