نتایج جستجو برای: developmental stuttering

تعداد نتایج: 124289  

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 neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry 1999
J M Anderson J D Hughes L J Rothi G P Crucian K M Heilman

The effects of dopamine on developmental stuttering was studied in a 44 year old man with developmental stuttering and Parkinson's disease during three levodopa "on" periods and three "off" periods. When compared with the "off" periods, during the "on"' periods he demonstrated an increase of speech dysfluencies. These findings lend support to the dopamine hypothesis of developmental stuttering.

Background & Objective: Stuttering is a prevalent disorder in children and adolescents. Because attention is the only fuel resource for cognitive functions and the language have high cognitive functions, then it is possible that speech difficulties are related to attention deficit. The purpose of this study was to investigate the attentional demand of speech in children and adolescents with dev...

1999
JeVrey M Anderson John D Hughes Leslie J Gonzalez Rothi Gregory P Crucian K M Heilman

The eVects of dopamine on developmental stuttering was studied in a 44 year old man with developmental stuttering and Parkinson’s disease during three levodopa “on” periods and three “oV” periods. When compared with the “oV” periods, during the “on”’ periods he demonstrated an increase of speech dysfluencies. These findings lend support to the dopamine hypothesis of developmental stuttering. (J...

Journal: :Lancet 2002
Martin Sommer Martin A Koch Walter Paulus Cornelius Weiller Christian Büchel

BACKGROUND The neuronal basis of persistent developmental stuttering is unknown. The disorder could be related to a reduced left hemisphere dominance, which functional neuroimaging data suggest might lead to right hemispheric motor and premotor overactivation. Alternatively, the core deficit underlying stuttering might be located in the speech-dominant left hemisphere. Furthermore, magnetoencep...

Journal: :Sao Paulo medical journal = Revista paulista de medicina 2014
Cristiane Moço Canhetti Oliveira Paula Roberta Nogueira

CONTEXT AND OBJECTIVE There have been few studies on the risk factors for subgroups of stuttering. The aim of this study was to characterize the risk factors for developmental familial stuttering among boys who stutter and who do not stutter, such as disfluency types, associated quality and communication factors, emotional and physical stress, familial attitudes and personal reactions. DESIGN...

Journal: :Neurology 2004
A L Foundas A M Bollich J Feldman D M Corey M Hurley L C Lemen K M Heilman

OBJECTIVE To learn if people with persistent developmental stuttering and atypical anatomy of their auditory temporal cortex have, when compared to control subjects, changes in fluency induced with delayed auditory feedback (DAF). BACKGROUND DAF improves fluency in many individuals who stutter, and induces dysfluency in some normal people. The planum temporale (PT), a portion of auditory temp...

Journal: :Brain and language 2008
Anne-Lise Giraud Katrin Neumann Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Levi Alexander W von Gudenberg Harald A Euler Heinrich Lanfermann Christine Preibisch

Previous studies suggest that anatomical anomalies [Foundas, A. L., Bollich, A. M., Corey, D. M., Hurley, M., & Heilman, K. M. (2001). Anomalous anatomy of speech-language areas in adults with persistent developmental stuttering. Neurology, 57, 207-215; Foundas, A. L., Corey, D. M., Angeles, V., Bollich, A. M., Crabtree-Hartman, E., & Heilman, K. M. (2003). Atypical cerebral laterality in adult...

Journal: :iranian rehabilitation journal 0
elham masumi department of speech therapy, faculty of rehabilitation, iran university of medical sciences, nezam alley, shahid shahnazari st., madar square, mirdamad blvad., tehran,iran. zohre arani kashani department of speech therapy, faculty of rehabilitation, iran university of medical sciences, nezam alley, shahid shahnazari st., madar square, mirdamad blvad., tehran,iran. ali ghorbani department of speech therapy, faculty of rehabilitation, iran university of medical sciences, nezam alley, shahid shahnazari st., madar square, mirdamad blvad., tehran,iran. mohammad kamali department of speech therapy, faculty of rehabilitation, iran university of medical sciences, nezam alley, shahid shahnazari st., madar square, mirdamad blvad., tehran,iran.

objectives: stuttering is one of the most prevalent speech and language disorders. symptomology of stuttering has been surveyed from different aspects such as biological, developmental, environmental, emotional, learning and linguistic. previous researches in english-speaking people have suggested that some linguistic features such as word meanings may play a role in the frequency of speech non...

Journal: :NeuroImage 2008
Soo-Eun Chang Kirk I. Erickson Nicoline G. Ambrose Mark A. Hasegawa-Johnson Christy L. Ludlow

Stuttering is a developmental speech disorder that occurs in 5% of children with spontaneous remission in approximately 70% of cases. Previous imaging studies in adults with persistent stuttering found left white matter deficiencies and reversed right-left asymmetries compared to fluent controls. We hypothesized that similar differences might be present indicating brain development differences ...

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