Title: Stuttering: an overview
1Stuttering an overview
2Parameters of Speech FluencyStarkweather (1987)
- Continuity
- Logical sequence
- Pausing
- Rate
- Duration and Coarticulation
- Effort
- Linguistic planning
- Muscle movement
3Distinguishing disfluency from dysfluency
- Normal disfluency can be distinguished from
dysfluency on the bases of - Frequency
- Quality
- Accompanying features (overt and covert)
4Normal disfluencies
- Normal disfluencies include
- Repetitions (of sounds, syllables, words and
phrases) - Prolongations (of syllabic elements, usually for
emphasis, or to gain planning time) - Unfilled pauses or hesitations
- Filled pauses
- Revisions
5Fluency and dysfluency
- A. There is a noticable lack of fluency in normal
speech production. Goldman-Eisler (1968)
estimated that filled and unfilled pause time
averaged 40-50 of overall speaking time in
picture description tasks. - B. There is some evidence that these disfluencies
are necessary to allow on-line speech production. - 1. Beattie Bradbury (1979). When subjects
paused for more than 600 msec. in story-telling,
a light went on. Subjects were told that it
indicated poor story-telling. Pauses decreased by
35, but repetitions of words and syllables went
up 104, while the narrative quality declined as
well. - 2. Lindsley (1976). It took his subjects reliably
longer to initiate a noun-verb sequence than a
simple noun when describing pictures. Subjects
need to plan ahead a certain distance, and need
planning time to accomplish this.
6Fluency and disfluency (continued)
- 3. Beattie (1983) has noted gaze aversion during
disfluencies, suggesting that the speaker is
preoccupied with planning and cannot be
distracted by eye contact. - 4. Eye gaze patterns in normal speech In most
American dialects, speakers may look away, while
listeners should look at the speaker (Mayo,
1967). What are the ramifications for variations
in this pattern?
7Fluency and disfluency (continued)
- C. Patterns of pauses and disfluencies (loci
studies) - 1. They are quite reliably located a major
constituent boundaries, with the exception of
those occurring before abstract or infrequent
lexical items. Some have suggested that filled
pauses are usually used for syntactic planning,
while unfilled pauses usually precede lexical
search. (Maclay Osgood) - 2. Beattie (1983) suggests that the macro-unit
for discourse processing may be as large as eight
clauses in length, because disfluencies tend to
rise and fall in about eight-clause cycles.
8Fluency and disfluency (continued)
- 3. Factors which tend to aggravate normal
fluency - a. stress
- b. high cognitive loading
- c. increased linguistic/syntactic demand -
especially true in children - d. fatigue
- e. speed
9Cardinal features of stuttering
- Part-word repetitions
- In normally fluent speech, incidence of lt2, lt10
of all disfluencies - In stuttering gt2 incidence, and 50-75 of
disfluencies - In normally fluent speech, lt2 repetitions in
stuttered speech gt2 repetitions - Repetitions accompanied by tenseness, rapidity,
disrhythmia, schwa vowel, awareness
10Cardinal features (continued)
- Prolongations
- Longer in stuttered speech
- On elements not typically prolonged in fluent
speech - Not used for planning or emphasis
- Blocking (virtually unique to stuttering)
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12Stuttering DEVELOPS and changes over time
- Stuttering at onset may be very different from
what it becomes as the child grows and develops
coping strategies to deal with stuttering and the
reactions s/he gets when talking
13Exercise comparing normal and stuttered
disfluencies
- Listen to the following samples and follow along
on the transcripts - What features are common to both speakers?
- What features distinguish the two speakers?
14Mike
- Interviewer What do you think the Presidents
top priority should be this year? - M Uh, the economy. I think if uh the -- I think
if you solve a lot of the uh economic problems
youll solve a lot of other problems, you know
uhyou know, when economics or when the when
people are out of work, dont have money, crime
goes up, drug use goes up. Uh I think you have
you know a psychological type of disorders go
up..You know, people become a little bit
anxious, and I think..if you solve that if you
can help rel uh resolve that problem I mean
youll help solve a lot of other problems. You
know, we we wont be as tight with other people.
I n- not tight, tight in the sense of money,
you know, youyou know, people areright now, you
know, why give money to this country why do
this you know for these people why do this for
that? And you know, I- its the reason is
because they dont have a job or theyre afraid
theyll lose their job and there wont be money
for them if they have to collect or you know,
that that type of uh anxiety.
15Tom
- That's possible, yeah.
- But I've gone through all kinds of programs and
- I've read up on what I think that how stuttering
can sometimes be cured through psychological
counseling. - So when I read that it's like , 'Oh yeah that's
the new hope - I'm just that way because of my past failures.
- I know, but it's just that I tend to look forward
rather than dwell in the present which isn't
always good. - Well, let's see
- I would say being called on in class or being
where a teacher would say, 'Let's go in a circle
for group discussion' - And he starts on the opposite side of the room
- and I just happen to be the last one.
- That's the worst case.
16Accessory behaviors (secondaries)
- Usually appear later in development
- Appear learned and reactive
- Differ from PWS to PWS
- May include
- Physical concomitants
- Tension and tremor
- Anticipatory behaviors, postponements
- Timing devices
- Escape behaviors
- Breathing irregularities
- Circumlocutions
17How do secondary behaviors develop?
- Classical conditioning
- Operant conditioning
18Classical conditioning
Unconditioned stimulus (UCS) Exs
Food Frustration, Critical Listener
Unconditioned response (UCR) Exs
salivation Tension response
Conditioned stimulus (CS) Exs bell, easy
stuttering
19Chaining of stimuli in stuttering
CR Tension response, tense stuttering
CS Easy stuttering
Tension on initiation of utterance
CS Sounds Words People Situations, etc.
Silent blocks
Anticipation
Fear, physiological correlates
20Instrumental conditioning
(Increases response)
Stimulus Sit!
Response (Dog sits)
Consequence Treat
Secondaries Loss of eye contact Head
nod Filler Word substitution
Struggle, tension
Escape Release from the moment of stuttering
21Combining classical and instrumental conditioning
in stuttering
S
R
C
CS Sound, Word, Situation. people
Escape from negative emotion
Avoidance Behavior (ex word substitutions,
silence)
CR Fear
Instrumental conditioning
Classical conditioning
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23Covert features
- Speaking fears (including fears of situations,
addressees, targets) - Fear of stuttering
- Avoidance
- Shame, guilt
- Belief systems
24What is stuttering? The ABCs
25The As and Cs of stuttering in pictures
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28What does stuttering sound like, look like, feel
like?
- See some examples of what stuttering
- Sounds like
- Looks like
- Feels like
- At the StutteringHomePage
- http//www.mankato.msus.edu/dept/comdis/kuster/aud
io.html
29Impairment, disability and handicap in stuttering
(ICIDH Yaruss Quesal)
- Impairment any loss or abnormality of
psychological, physiological, or anatomical
structure or function. - In stuttering interruptions in the flow of
speech - Disability any restriction or lack of ability
to perform an activity in the normal manner - In stuttering limitations on the individuals
ability to communicate or engage in social or
vocational activities - Handicap a disadvantage for an individual,
resulting from and I or D that limitsthe
fulfillment of a role that is normal..for that
individual. - In stuttering disadvantages experienced by the
PWS that limits his/her ability to fulfill
social, vocational or economic roles.
30Stuttering Impairment, Disability and Handicap
(Yaruss)
31Stuttering doesnt have to handicap some famous
examples
For more examples of PWS who have made a
difference, go to the Stuttering Home Page.
32Exercise Observing stuttering
- Making behavioral observations
- Actions or speech that are directly observed
- Observations should not reveal judgments,
interpretations or opinions - Examples
- The client repeated the /t/ sound three times on
the word time. - The client stated that her father stutters but
that the subject of stuttering was not discussed
at home. - The client grimaced and said, This is boring.
33- Making inferences
- The observers interpretation of the observation.
- These may vary from observer to observer and will
be influenced by the observers beliefs, past
experiences, values, culture, training, etc. - Examples
- The client demonstrated a core stuttering
behavior - The clients father experiences guilt and shame
regarding his stuttering - The clinicians materials and pacing were not
appropriate to the clients age.
34Observations and inferences
- What core and secondary behaviors did you
observe? - What feelings and attitudes were expressed? How?
- What other aspects of the nature of stuttering
were revealed in the video clips?
35The typical typology of stuttering symptoms
- Where stutters are typically found
- On utterance-initial syllables
- Initial consonants
- Words earlier in the utterance
- Longer, less frequent words of the language
(adults) - Shorter, function words (children)
- The consistency effect
- The adaptation effect
36Conditions which reduce the frequency of
stuttering
- Delayed auditory feedback (DAF)
- Frequency altered feedback
- Slowed speech
- Shadowing
- Singing
- Rhythmic speech
- Choral reading
- Lipped speech
- Whispering
- Why do you think these reduce stuttering? What
are some common features of these adjustments to
normal speech style? - Question can these be used as therapy techniques?
37Conditions which tend to INCREASE stuttering
- Fear of stuttering/speaking
- Expectancy
- Time pressure
- Status gap/number of addressees
- Propositionality, linguistic and cognitive load
- Learned associations
- Other listener reaction variables
- What do these have in common with conditions that
aggravate normal disfluency?
38Specific examples of conditions that tend to
increase stuttering severity
- Speaking on the telephone
- Saying ones own name
- Telling jokes
- Repeating a misunderstood message
- Waiting to speak
- Speaking in front of authority figures, audiences
- Hiding/avoiding stuttering (trying to be fluent)
39Stuttering Incidence and prevalence
- Incidence is 4, prevalence is 1
- Implications for recovery
- Implications for treatment
- Most common type is developmental and ideopathic,
beginning between 2-4 years of age - Later or adult onset is rare, usually accompanied
by neurological insult or psychological trauma
however, some late childhood onsets are
unexplained. - Newer data (Yairi, et al., 1996 Kloth, et al.,
1995) suggest median onset age of 30-38 mos.
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41Gender and fluency
- Boys are 3-4 times more likely to stutter than
girls this imbalance increases with age - Gender differences are less at onset, but girls
appear to recover more frequently (Yairi, et al.,
1996)
Yairi and the UI,U-C Research team
42Genetics and stuttering
- First degree relatives of PWS more than 3x more
likely to stutter than general population - 35 of sons of female PWS will stutter
- 17 of daughters of female PWS will stutter
- 22 of sons of male PWS will stutter
- 9 of daughters of male PWS will stutter
- Patterns of chronicity and recovery also appear
to be inherited (Yairi, et al.), although
severity and typology are not.
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44Twin studies
- There is 77 concordance between monozygotic
twins for stuttering - Lack of full concordance does suggest possible
environmental contributions - What is environmental?
- Dizygotic twins have a 32 concordance rate,
while non-twin siblings have an 18 concordance
rate.
45Recovery from stuttering
- 80 of stuttering spontaneously resolves before
age 16 however, - The window for recovery appears best within 2
years of symptom onset (Yairi, et al., 1996) - Recovery at older ages diminishes in frequency,
to less than 20 by age 10 (Andrews, et al.,
1983) Ramig (1993) suggests this rate is even
lower after age 8.
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47Stuttering terminology
- Stuttering has an extensive lexicon to describe
symptoms, features, theoretical models, treatment
approaches, etc. - See an online listing, with definitions
48Keeping up with the stuttering literature
- To search the latest developments In stuttering,
or research your project/paper, go to - http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PubMed/
- (PubMed)
- Remember that ASHA journals are now on-line! (If
you are not a NSSHLA member, join now!) - Remember to distinguish between information found
on the web, and peer-reviewed data. - Do statistics confuse you? Here is a readable
tutorial on how to read the stats in research
articles - Good lay sites to introduce yourself and your
clients to information about stuttering - http//www.stutteringhomepage.com
- NSA and SFA websites
- http//www.nspstutter.org/
- http//www.stuttersfa.org