نتایج جستجو برای: stuttering

تعداد نتایج: 2042  

2008

.................................................................................................................. 7 INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................................... 8 Theories of Stuttering ..................................................................................................... 8 Adulthood Anxiety and Stuttering...

2005
Pierpaolo Busan Giovanna Pelamatti Alessandro Tavano Michele Grassi Franco Fabbro

Developmental stuttering is a disruption in normal speech fluency and rhythm. Developmental stuttering usually manifests between 6 and 9 years of age and may persist in adulthood. At present, the exact etiology of developmental stuttering is not fully clear. Besides, the dopaminergic neurological component is likely to have a causal role in the manifestation of stuttering behaviors. Actually, s...

Journal: :Journal of communication disorders 2004
Per A Alm

UNLABELLED The possible relation between stuttering and the basal ganglia is discussed. Important clues to the pathophysiology of stuttering are given by conditions known to alleviate dysfluency, like the rhythm effect, chorus speech, and singing. Information regarding pharmacologic trials, lesion studies, brain imaging, genetics, and developmental changes of the nervous system is reviewed. The...

2014
Jie Liu Zhishun Wang Yuankai Huo Stephanie M. Davidson Kristin Klahr Carl L. Herder Chamonix O. Sikora Bradley S. Peterson

Developmental stuttering is a disorder of speech fluency with an unknown pathogenesis. The similarity of its phenotype and natural history with other childhood neuropsychiatric disorders of frontostriatal pathology suggests that stuttering may have a closely related pathogenesis. We investigated in this study the potential involvement of frontostriatal circuits in developmental stuttering. We c...

Journal: :Journal of fluency disorders 2003
Michael Blomgren Srikantan S Nagarajan James N Lee Tianhao Li Lynn Alvord

UNLABELLED An fMRI study examining lexical access and lexical generation in nine non-stuttering and seven stuttering speakers is presented. Lexical access was examined during a word description task that was presented auditorily while subjects "silently" thought of the target words. Participants alternated between four 30-s rest blocks and four 30-s "active" blocks. Activation patterns were ass...

Journal: :Journal of communication disorders 2010
Marilyn Langevin Ann Packman Mark Onslow

UNLABELLED Speech-language pathologists (SLPs) are advised to consider the distress of preschoolers and parents along with the social consequences of the child's stuttering when deciding whether to begin or delay treatment. Seventy-seven parents completed a survey that yielded quantitative and qualitative data that reflected their perceptions of the impact of stuttering on their children and th...

Journal: :Perspectives on fluency and fluency disorders 2010
Rodney Gabel Tim Brackenbury Farzan Irani

The purpose of this study was to examine societal knowledge of stuttering, access to information sources, and the influence of information sources on knowledge of stuttering. 185 participants from Northwest Ohio were surveyed. Results of the study indicated that the general public varies in their knowledge of stuttering and that majority of participants had not accessed information about stutte...

2016
Hulya Ertekin Yusuf Haydar Ertekin Basak Sahin Sinan Yayla Ersin Turkyilmaz Medine Kara

Turner Syndrome (TS) is the most common chromosomal anomaly in women. Its psychiatric manifestations have not been clearly defined. Occurrence of schizophrenia is higher in patients with TS than in the normal population. The literature has reported instances associating stuttering as a side effect of antipsychotic drugs, particularly clozapine-induced stuttering. We found only one case report d...

2015
Jennifer L. Dearborn Cassie Davis John W. Krakauer

Background and purpose: The acute onset of stuttering in an adult is not uncommon and rarely is caused by ischemic stroke. A neurologist is likely to encounter this presentation and it is important to identify distinguishing features between ischemic stroke and other causes. Adult-onset acquired stuttering is classified as either neurogenic if secondary to brain injury or psychogenic in the abs...

Journal: :Journal of fluency disorders 2011
Timothy W Flynn Kenneth O St Louis

PURPOSE Live oral or recorded video presentations on stuttering were delivered to high school students in order to determine the extent to which their attitudes toward stuttering could be improved. METHODS A classroom teacher administered the Public Opinion Survey of Human Attributes-Stuttering (POSHA-S) to two health classes before and after an oral live presentation by a person who stutters...

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