نتایج جستجو برای: developmental stuttering

تعداد نتایج: 124289  

2007
Andrew Stuart Joseph Kalinowski Tim Saltuklaroglu Vijay K. Guntupalli

Purpose: This study examined objective and subjective measures of the effect of a self-contained ear-level device delivering altered auditory feedback (AAF) for those who stutter 12 months following initial fitting with and without the device. Method: Nine individuals with developmental stuttering participated. In Experiment 1, the proportion of stuttering was examined during reading and monolo...

Journal: :Movement disorders : official journal of the Movement Disorder Society 2009
Martin Sommer Kathrin Knappmeyer Evke Jane Hunter Alexander Wolffvon Gudenberg Nicole Neef Walter Paulus

Imaging studies suggest a right hemispheric (pre)motor overactivity in patients with persistent developmental stuttering (PDS). The interhemispheric inhibition (IHI) studied with transcranial magnetic stimulation is an established measure of the interplay between right and left motor areas. We assessed IHI in 15 young male adults with PDS and 15 age-matched fluent-speaking subjects. We addition...

Journal: :Brain and language 2003
John Van Borsel Eric Achten Patrick Santens Philippe Lahorte Tony Voet

The purpose of this investigation was to explore the feasibility of fMRI in the study of developmental stuttering. Speech contrasts (loud versus silent reading) and language contrasts (reading of semantically meaningful text versus nonsense words) of six developmental stutterers and six nonstutterers were compared using a commercial 1 Tesla MR-Scanner (Siemens Expert). Results indicate that map...

2017
Jianping Qiao Zhishun Wang Guihu Zhao Yuankai Huo Carl L. Herder Chamonix O. Sikora Bradley S. Peterson

The aim of this study was to identify differences in functional and effective brain connectivity between persons who stutter (PWS) and typically developing (TD) fluent speakers, and to assess whether those differences can serve as biomarkers to distinguish PWS from TD controls. We acquired resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging data in 44 PWS and 50 TD controls. We then used Indepe...

Journal: :Journal of paediatrics and child health 2013
Mark Onslow Sue O'Brian

Stuttering is a speech disorder that begins during the first years of life and is among the most prevalent of developmental disorders. It appears to be a problem with neural processing of speech involving genetics. Onset typically occurs during the first years of life, shortly after language development begins. Clinical presentation during childhood is interrupted and effortful speech productio...

Journal: :Journal of fluency disorders 2007
John Van Borsel John A Tetnowski

UNLABELLED The characteristics of various genetic syndromes have included "stuttering" as a primary symptom associated with that syndrome. Specifically, Down syndrome, fragile X syndrome, Prader-Willi syndrome, Tourette syndrome, Neurofibromatosis type I, and Turner syndrome all list "stuttering" as a characteristic of that syndrome. An extensive review of these syndromes indicated clients diag...

Journal: :Journal of fluency disorders 2008
Anna Hearne Ann Packman Mark Onslow Susan Quine

UNLABELLED Adolescence is a complicated phase of maturation during which a great deal of physical, neurological and social development occurs. Clinically this phase is thought to be the last chance to arrest the development of the disorder of stuttering before it becomes chronic in adulthood. However, little treatment development for this age group has occurred. Previous research on the impact ...

Journal: :Journal of communication disorders 2012
Paul H Brocklehurst Robin J Lickley Martin Corley

UNLABELLED This study investigates whether the experience of stuttering can result from the speaker's anticipation of his words being misrecognized. Twelve adults who stutter (AWS) repeated single words into what appeared to be an automatic speech-recognition system. Following each iteration of each word, participants provided a self-rating of whether they stuttered on it and the computer then ...

Journal: :Journal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHR 2004
Roger J Ingham Peter T Fox Janis C Ingham Jinhu Xiong Frank Zamarripa L Jean Hardies Jack L Lancaster

This article reports a gender replication study of the P. T. Fox et al. (2000) performance correlation analysis of neural systems that distinguish between normal and stuttered speech in adult males. Positron-emission tomographic (PET) images of cerebral blood flow (CBF) were correlated with speech behavior scores obtained during PET imaging for 10 dextral female stuttering speakers and 10 dextr...

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