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Zebrowski, Patricia M.; Conture, Edward G. – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1989
The study comparing perceptual judgments of speech disfluency by 20 mothers of either stuttering or normally fluent children found no appreciable differences between groups in their judgments. Both groups of mothers most frequently judged sound/syllable repetitions to be stuttered, followed by whole-word repetitions and broken words. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Children, Mothers, Phonetics
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
James, Jack E.; And Others – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1989
The study of 20 adult stutterers participating in a 32-hour program of fluency training found that results were consistent with the hypothesis that improvements in fluency during response-contingent stimulation may occur when stutterers access extant fluent speech that is not otherwise being fully utilized. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Adults, Contingency Management, Speech Handicaps, Speech Improvement
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Yairi, Ehud; Ambrose, Nicoline – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1992
Preschool children (n=27) were followed for 2 to 12 years after stuttering onset. Findings indicated a marked deceleration in the mean frequency of stuttering-like disfluencies. Most of the reduction took place early, especially near the end of the first year postonset. Chronic and recovering stutterers could be distinguished by 20 months…
Descriptors: Clinical Diagnosis, Handicap Identification, Incidence, Longitudinal Studies
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Postma, Albert; Kolk, Herman – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1993
This paper discusses the speech monitoring process that underlies overt self-repairing of speech errors; the covert repair hypothesis, dealing particularly with explaining the variety of disfluency types from a restricted set of repair principles; quantitative and qualitative characteristics of disfluency in people who stutter; and the covert…
Descriptors: Error Analysis (Language), Error Correction, Error Patterns, Phonology
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Prins, David; And Others – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1991
The occurrence of stuttering on stress-peak and unstressed syllables in connected speech was studied in 10 young adult stutterers. Results showed a significant coincidence of stutter events and syllabic stress peaks, particularly in polysyllabic words, though stuttering on the first three words of principal clauses appeared independent of syllabic…
Descriptors: Acoustic Phonetics, Incidence, Speech Acts, Speech Evaluation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Smolka, Elzbieta; Adamczyk, Bogdan – International Journal of Rehabilitation Research, 1992
The influence of visual signals (echo and reverberation) on speech fluency in 60 stutterers and nonstutterers was examined. Visual signals were found to exert a corrective influence on the speech of stutterers but less than the influence of acoustic stimuli. Use of visual signals in combination with acoustic and tactile signals is recommended. (DB)
Descriptors: Feedback, Sensory Integration, Speech Handicaps, Speech Improvement
Lehtihalmes, Matti; And Others – 1985
Dialysis encephalopathy is a progressive neurological disorder occurring after long-term hemodialysis in some renal failure patients. Accumulation of aluminum in the brain is suspected as its cause, and the use of reverse osmosis of the dialysis water and administration of desferrioxamine to the patient have been successful in reducing the…
Descriptors: Biochemistry, Case Studies, Clinical Diagnosis, Diseases
Alme, Ann-Marie – 1985
A study of overt audible speech behavior in eight male and one female Swedish adults examined the relationship between disfluency and speaking modality, disfluency type in mild versus severe stutterers, and disfluency and psycholinguistic variables. Three conditions of experimental manipulation were used: reading aloud, reading the longer lines of…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Dialogs (Language), Error Patterns, Form Classes (Languages)