Effects of concurrent cognitive processing on the fluency of word repetition: comparison between persons who do and do not stutter.
نویسنده
چکیده
UNLABELLED This study investigated how silent reading and word memorization may affect the fluency of concurrently repeated words. The words silently read or memorized were phonologically similar or dissimilar to the words of the repetition task. Fourteen adults who stutter and 16 who do not participated in the experiment. The two groups were matched for age, education, sex, forward and backward memory span and vocabulary. It was found that the disfluencies of persons who stutter significantly increased during word repetition when similar words were read or memorized concurrently. In contrast, the disfluencies of persons who do not stutter were not significantly affected by either secondary task. These results indicate that the speech of persons who stutter is more sensitive to interference from concurrently performed cognitive processing than that of nonstuttering persons. It is proposed that the phonological and articulatory systems of persons who stutter are protected less efficiently from interference by attention-demanding processing within the central executive system. Alternative interpretations are also discussed. EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES Readers will learn how modern speech production theories and the concept of modularity can account for stuttering, and will be able to explain the greater vulnerability of stutterer's speech fluency to concurrent cognitive processing.
منابع مشابه
Cognitive processing load as a determinant of stuttering: summary of a research programme.
The present paper integrates the results of experimental studies in which cognitive differences between stuttering and nonstuttering adults were investigated. In a monitoring experiment it was found that persons who stutter encode semantic information more slowly than nonstuttering persons. In dual-task experiments the two groups were compared in overt word-repetition and sentence-production ex...
متن کاملEffects of Concurrent Mental Calculation on Stuttering, Inhalation and Speech Timing
A dual-task experiment was performed in order to test the assumption that speech disfluencies can result from interference between overt speech movements and concurrently performed cognitive processes. In a word-repetition task, sequences of three unrelated three-syllable nouns had to be repeated continuously. Under dual-task conditions, a mental addition task had to be performed concurrently. ...
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Objective Stuttering is a developmental disorder of speech fluency with unknown causes. One of the proposed theories in this field is deficits in speech motor control that is associated with damaged control, timing, and coordination of the speech muscles. Fundamental frequency, fundamental frequency range, intensity, intensity range, and voice onset time are the most important acoustic componen...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- Journal of fluency disorders
دوره 27 2 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2002