UKEveryone produces disfluencies when they speak spontaneously. However, whereas most disfluencies pass unnoticed, the repetitions, blocks and prolongations produced by stutterers can have a severely disruptive effect on communication. The causes of stuttering have proven hard to pin down - researchers differ widely in their views on the cognitive mechanisms that underlie it. The present chapter presents initial research which supports a view (Vasic and Wijnen, this volume) that places the emphasis firmly on the self-monitoring system, suggesting that stuttering may be a consequence of over-sensitivity to the types of minor speech error that we all make. Our study also allows us to ask whether the speech of people who stutter is perceived a...
The present study investigated the possibility of finding and quantifying correlates of stuttering b...
This study investigated whether student clinicians working with stutterers subsequently produce more...
Citation: Sengupta, R., Shah, S., Loucks, T. M. J., Pelczarski, K., Scott Yaruss, J., Gore, K., & Na...
Two experiments used a magnitude estimation paradigm to test whether perception of disfluency is a f...
Grant Award no. ES/G01230X/1In their Covert Repair Hypothesis (CRH), Postma and Kolk (1993) proposed...
The order of the second and third authors is arbitrary. Correspondence concerning this chapter shoul...
The Covert Repair Hypothesis (CRH) is an account for speech errors in normally fluent speakers, and ...
This study investigates whether the experience of stuttering can result from the speaker's anticipat...
This paper discusses what happens when things go wrong in the planning and execution of running spee...
The purpose of this investigation is to ascertain, in terms of frequency of stuttering reactions, th...
Stuttering identification, measurement, research, and treatment have for many years had their basis ...
Thirty-two stutterers read over 300,000 words, stuttering in relation to over 30,000 of them. Stutte...
Despite traditional evidence that lexically-stressed content words are the most common loci of disfl...
Previous research suggests that listeners can use the presence of speech disfluencies to predict upc...
A study reported in the Quarterly Journal of Speech (November, 1935) showed the existence of a phone...
The present study investigated the possibility of finding and quantifying correlates of stuttering b...
This study investigated whether student clinicians working with stutterers subsequently produce more...
Citation: Sengupta, R., Shah, S., Loucks, T. M. J., Pelczarski, K., Scott Yaruss, J., Gore, K., & Na...
Two experiments used a magnitude estimation paradigm to test whether perception of disfluency is a f...
Grant Award no. ES/G01230X/1In their Covert Repair Hypothesis (CRH), Postma and Kolk (1993) proposed...
The order of the second and third authors is arbitrary. Correspondence concerning this chapter shoul...
The Covert Repair Hypothesis (CRH) is an account for speech errors in normally fluent speakers, and ...
This study investigates whether the experience of stuttering can result from the speaker's anticipat...
This paper discusses what happens when things go wrong in the planning and execution of running spee...
The purpose of this investigation is to ascertain, in terms of frequency of stuttering reactions, th...
Stuttering identification, measurement, research, and treatment have for many years had their basis ...
Thirty-two stutterers read over 300,000 words, stuttering in relation to over 30,000 of them. Stutte...
Despite traditional evidence that lexically-stressed content words are the most common loci of disfl...
Previous research suggests that listeners can use the presence of speech disfluencies to predict upc...
A study reported in the Quarterly Journal of Speech (November, 1935) showed the existence of a phone...
The present study investigated the possibility of finding and quantifying correlates of stuttering b...
This study investigated whether student clinicians working with stutterers subsequently produce more...
Citation: Sengupta, R., Shah, S., Loucks, T. M. J., Pelczarski, K., Scott Yaruss, J., Gore, K., & Na...