journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37852018/linguistic-features-of-stuttering-during-spontaneous-speech
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Haley J Warner, Ravi Shroff, Arianna Zuanazzi, Richard M Arenas, Eric S Jackson
PURPOSE: Previous work shows that linguistic features (e.g., word length, word frequency) impact the predictability of stuttering events. Most of this work has been conducted using reading tasks. Our study examined how linguistic features impact the predictability of stuttering events during spontaneous speech. METHODS: The data were sourced from the FluencyBank database and consisted of interviews with 35 adult stutterers (27,009 words). Three logistic regression mixed models were fit as the primary analyses: one model with four features (i...
September 30, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37776613/reduced-stuttering-for-school-age-children-a-systematic-review
#22
REVIEW
Georgina Johnson, Mark Onslow, Sarah Horton, Elaina Kefalianos
BACKGROUND: Treatment of school-age children (6-12 years of age) who stutter is a public health priority. Their clinical needs include a psychosocial focus and stuttering reduction. For the latter clinical need, there is a critical window of opportunity for these children warranting research attention. PURPOSE: The purpose of the review is to guide future clinical research by establishing (a) what interventions are associated with stuttering reduction for school-age children (b) the reported immediate and longer-term effects of those interventions, and (c) the level of evidence for these interventions in terms of study design...
September 22, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37769595/contemporary-clinical-conversations-about-stuttering-neurodiversity-and-ableism
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rosalee Shenker, Naomi Rodgers, Barry Guitar, Mark Onslow
PURPOSE: To discuss issues about neurodiversity and ableism, and how they pertain to clinical management of stuttering, with particular reference to early childhood stuttering. METHODS: During a webinar this year, the issue emerged of how concepts of neurodiversity and ableism apply to early childhood stuttering during the pre-school years. It became apparent that this topic elicited disparate views and would be of particular interest to students of speech-language pathology...
September 19, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37660637/speech-disfluencies-in-bilingual-greek-english-young-adults
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zoi Gkalitsiou, Danielle Werle
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to investigate the frequency and types of disfluencies in Greek-English bilingual adults across naturalistic speech samples and compare frequency and types of disfluencies between the participants' L1 and L2. METHODS: Participants in the study included 26 Greek-English bilingual young adults. All participants were sequential bilinguals, whose first language was Greek and second language was English. Two speech samples were collected in each language, a conversational and a narrative sample, which were subsequently analyzed for the frequency and types of disfluencies...
August 23, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37562079/norwegian-speech-language-pathologists-treatment-practices-for-preschool-children-who-stutter-an-explorative-study
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Melanie Kirmess, Linn Stokke Guttormsen, Hilde Hofslundsengen, Kari-Anne Bottegaard Næss, Elaina Kefalianos
PURPOSE: This study investigated the treatment practices of speech-language pathologists (SLPs) with preschool children who stutter to explore variations in service delivery and, consequently to better inform and support evidence-based practice. METHOD: 121 Norwegian SLPs completed an online survey about stuttering treatment for preschool children aged up to six years. They reported on treatment training, choices, setting, dosage, and outcomes. Data was analysed descriptively...
August 5, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37586168/the-fifth-croatia-stuttering-symposium-part-iii-mental-health-and-early-stuttering
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mark Onslow, Robyn Lowe, Suzana Jelčić Jakšić, Marie-Christine Franken, Anna Hearne, Irma Uijterlinde, Kurt Eggers
PURPOSE: The Fifth Croatia Stuttering Symposium of 2022 continued the Fourth Croatia Stuttering Symposium 2019 theme of the connection between research and clinical practice. At the 2022 Symposium, there were 145 delegates from 21 countries. This paper documents the contents of the third of three Symposium modules. METHODS: The module topic was mental health and early stuttering, and that pre-schoolers who stutter are at risk of developing mental health issues. A clinical situation was considered where a parent of a 3-year-old child asked a clinician what the early signs of mental health issues might be for a child who stutters...
August 2, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37531866/differences-in-auditory-verbal-working-memory-between-adults-who-do-and-do-not-stutter-on-an-n-back-task
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zoi Gkalitsiou, Courtney Byrd
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to investigate auditory verbal working memory in adults who do (AWS) and do not (AWNS) stutter using a highly demanding linguistic N-back task. METHODS: Fifteen AWS and 15 AWNS matched in age, gender and educational level were asked to hear series of words and respond by pressing a "yes" button if the word they just heard was the same as the word one, two, or three trials back. Words were either phonologically similar (i.e...
July 29, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37544029/nonword-reading-by-adults-who-stutter-in-a-transparent-orthography
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Horabail Venkatagiri, Nuggehalli P Nataraja, Theja Kuriakose
PURPOSE: Using word- and nonword-reading passages in Kannada, which has a transparent orthography, we attempted to determine (a) whether orthographic differences between English and Kannada may explain the observed differences in stutter rates on nonwords, and (b) whether longer nonwords, like words, incur higher rates of stutters. METHODS: Stutters are defined as sound or syllable repetitions, sound prolongations, broken words or nonwords (a pause within a word or nonword), abnormal pauses, and intrusive vowel-like sounds...
July 26, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37515980/reactions-and-responses-to-anticipation-of-stuttering-and-how-they-contribute-to-stuttered-speech-that-listeners-perceive-as-fluent-an-opinion-paper
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Patrick M Briley
The experience of stuttering is wide ranging and includes a variety of perceived and unperceived behaviors and experiences. One of those experiences is anticipation of stuttering. While anticipation of stuttering is commonly discussed in terms of being a prediction of an upcoming event, it has also been equated to an internal realization of stuttering - which is the conceptualization applied here. The aim of this paper is to impress upon the reader that anticipated moments of stuttering (whether at a conscious or subconscious level) must be met with an adaptive reaction or response (which may also occur consciously or subconsciously)...
July 26, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37494845/the-effects-of-attentional-focus-on-speech-motor-control-in-adults-who-stutter-with-and-without-social-evaluative-threat
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kim R Bauerly, Antje Mefferd
PURPOSE: We sought to investigate the effects of cued attentional shifts on speechmotor control in adults who stutter (AWS) and adults who do not stutter (ANS) when speaking under low and high social stress conditions. METHOD: Thirteen AWS' and 10 ANS' lip aperture (LA) and posterior tongue (PT) movements were assessed under a Cued-Internal and Cued-External attentional focus condition with and without social stress induction (i.e. speaking to an audience). Skin conductance levels were used to measure a stress response...
July 22, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37478807/stuttering-experience-of-people-in-china-a-cross-cultural-perspective
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yan Ma, Judith D Oxley, J Scott Yaruss, John A Tetnowski
PURPOSE: This study uses the Simplified Chinese version of the Overall Assessment of the Speaker's Experience of Stuttering for Adults (OASES-A-SC) to examine the stuttering experience of people in China and determine if there are differences between the data collected in China and other countries. METHODS: A total of 139 responses to the OASES-A-SC were collected in an online self-help community of people in China who stutter. Descriptive analyses were conducted to obtain the understanding of how stuttering impacts the life experience of people in China who stutter...
July 6, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37406551/complex-working-memory-in-adults-with-and-without-stuttering-disorders-performance-patterns-and-predictive-relationships
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Naomi Eichorn, Jessica Hall, Klara Marton
PURPOSE: Available studies of working memory (WM) in speakers who stutter tend to rely on parent report, focus on phonological WM, or measure WM in combination with other processes. The present research aimed to: (1) compare complex WM in adults who stutter (AWS) and adults who do not stutter (AWNS); (2) characterize group performance patterns; and (2) determine whether WM predicts stuttering severity. METHODS: Eighteen AWS and 20 AWNS completed parallel verbal and spatial span tasks in which to-be-remembered items were interleaved with a distracting task across varying set sizes...
June 26, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37393778/developmental-stuttering-physical-concomitants-associated-with-stuttering-and-tourette-syndrome-a-scoping-review
#33
REVIEW
Christelle Nilles, Lindsay Berg, Cassidy Fleming, Davide Martino, Tamara Pringsheim
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Developmental stuttering and Tourette syndrome (TS) are common neurodevelopmental disorders. Although disfluencies may co-occur in TS, their type and frequency do not always represent pure stuttering. Conversely, core symptoms of stuttering may be accompanied by physical concomitants (PCs) that can be confused for tics. This scoping review aimed to explore the similarities and differences between stuttering and tics in terms of epidemiology, comorbidities, phenomenology, evolution, physiopathology, and treatment...
June 23, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37354736/the-experience-of-polish-individuals-who-stutter-based-on-the-oases-outcomes
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katarzyna Węsierska, J Scott Yaruss, Kalina Kosacka, Łukasz Kowalczyk, Aleksandra Boroń
BACKGROUND: Prior research has shown that stuttering is a complex and individualized condition. The Overall Assessment of the Speaker's Experience of Stuttering (OASES; Yaruss & Quesal, 2016) is a well-researched tool that measures the impact of stuttering on an individual's life. This study has used the Polish version of the OASES to examine the experience of stuttering among Polish people who stutter. METHOD: The original, English version of the OASES was translated into Polish...
June 15, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37331088/a-cross-sectional-investigation-of-disfluencies-in-typically-developing-spanish-english-bilingual-children
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Raúl Rojas, Farzan Irani, Svenja Gusewski, Natalia Camacho
PURPOSE: This study examined the language skills and the type and frequency of disfluencies in the spoken narrative production of typically developing Spanish-English bilingual children. METHOD: A cross-sectional sample of 106 bilingual children (50 boys; 56 girls) enrolled in kindergarten through Grade 4, produced a total of 212 narrative retell language samples in English and Spanish. A specialized fluency coding system was implemented to index the percentage of total (%TD) and stuttering-like disfluencies (%SLD) in each language...
June 15, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37150093/t-pals-framework-to-assess-children-who-stutter-with-coexisting-disorders-a-tutorial
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lesley Wolk, Lisa LaSalle
The purpose of this paper is to present a tutorial on a diagnostic framework developed to assess children who stutter and exhibit co-existing disorders. While we have guidelines for treating these children, there are no specific guidelines for assessing them. We provide a rationale for the development of T-PALS with support from the literature. The T-PALS framework assesses 5 foundational key elements for the child: Temperament (T), Pragmatics (P), Articulation/phonology (A), Language (L), and Stuttering (S)...
June 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37247502/temporal-organization-of-syllables-in-paced-and-unpaced-speech-in-children-and-adolescents-who-stutter
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mona Franke, Philip Hoole, Simone Falk
PURPOSE: Speaking with an external rhythm has a tremendous fluency-enhancing effect in people who stutter. The aim of the present study is to examine whether syllabic timing related to articulatory timing (c-center) would differ between children and adolescents who stutter and a matched control group in an unpaced vs. a paced condition. METHODS: We recorded 48 German-speaking children and adolescents who stutter and a matched control group reading monosyllabic words with and without a metronome (unpaced and paced condition)...
May 11, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37028210/stuttering-management-practices-in-sri-lanka-a-mixed-method-study
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dinusha Nonis, Rachael Unicomb, Sally Hewat
PURPOSE: Speech and language therapy is a growing profession in Sri Lanka, and little is known about how stuttering is currently managed in the country. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate the current stuttering management practices in Sri Lanka and to investigate any barriers to service provision. METHOD: A convergent mixed methods design was employed across two phases. Sixty-four Sri Lankan speech and language therapists (SALTs) participated in online surveys in phase one and ten participated in semi structured interviews in phase two...
March 31, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37031644/behavioral-and-cognitive-affective-features-of-stuttering-in-preschool-age-children-regression-and-exploratory-cluster-analyses
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ryan A Millager, Mary S Dietrich, Robin M Jones
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to investigate associations among behavioral and cognitive-affective features of stuttering in preschool-age children who stutter, and the extent to which participants may or may not cluster together based on multiple indices of stuttering. METHODS: Participants were 296 preschool-age children who stutter (mean age 47.9 months). Correlation and regression analyses, as well as k-means cluster analyses were conducted between and among several indices of stuttering: frequency of stuttering- and non-stuttering-like disfluencies (SLDs and NSLDs), ratios of repetitions and prolongations/blocks out of total number of SLDs, associated nonspeech behaviors, duration of stuttering events, KiddyCAT scores (Vanryckeghem & Grutten, 2007), and a TOCS parent-rated scale (Gillam et al...
March 29, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37001466/adult-recasts-as-fluency-facilitators-in-preschoolers-who-stutter-evidence-from-fluencybank
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lisa LaSalle, Lesley Wolk
Adult conversational recasts are based on child platform utterances that contain errors (e.g., Child: "Me going." Adult: "Yes, you are going"), and recasts are effective in the child language literature. For many years, adult recasts of preschoolers' stuttered utterances were surmised as fluency-facilitating, but to date, no evidence has been reported to support their efficacy. The purpose was to investigate the natural occurrence of, and the fluency-facilitating potential of, recasts produced by caregivers and clinicians/examiners in free-play interactions transcribed from audio or video recordings on FluencyBank...
March 24, 2023: Journal of Fluency Disorders
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