To study the effects of clinicians\u27 slow rate on the speech of children who stutter with and without a concomitant phonological disorder, an A-B-A-B single case design was used with six clinician-child dyads, where B = Clinician\u27s slow speech rate model. Two boys and one girl, aged 49-54 months, stuttering with disordered phonology (S + DP), were compared to three boys aged 42-50 months, stuttering with normal phonology (S + NP). Articulation rates were measured in phones per second (pps) in clinician-child adjacent utterance pairs. The S + NP dyads showed improved fluency in the B condition through a larger effect size, higher mean baseline stutter reductions and lower percentages of non-overlapping data than did the S + DP dyads. Th...
Purpose To compare articulation and speech rates of school-aged children who do and do not stutter a...
Purpose To compare articulation and speech rates of school-aged children who do and do not stutter a...
Normally developing and phonologically disordered 3 and 4year -old children (groups N and P) were co...
This study investigated the changes of articulation rate, overall speech rate, and frequency of stut...
The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether the Covert Repair Hypothesis (CRH; e.g., Postma & ...
Objective: Stuttering is a fairly common speech disorder. However, the etiology is poorly understood...
People who stutter, especially children, have often been reported to exhibit a wide range of concomi...
People who stutter, especially children, have often been reported to exhibit a wide range of concomi...
People who stutter, especially children, have often been reported to exhibit a wide range of concomi...
This study investigated the change of eight CWS's dysfluencies according to modification of articula...
AbstractSpeech-language pathologists have reported increased evidence of co-occurring stuttering and...
Purpose: To investigate the holistic versus incremental phonological encoding processes of young chi...
Purpose: To investigate the holistic versus incremental phonological encoding processes of young chi...
Background: One language-related area that has recently received more attention from researchers wor...
PURPOSE: To identify and describe the speech rate and fluency of children with phonological disorder...
Purpose To compare articulation and speech rates of school-aged children who do and do not stutter a...
Purpose To compare articulation and speech rates of school-aged children who do and do not stutter a...
Normally developing and phonologically disordered 3 and 4year -old children (groups N and P) were co...
This study investigated the changes of articulation rate, overall speech rate, and frequency of stut...
The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether the Covert Repair Hypothesis (CRH; e.g., Postma & ...
Objective: Stuttering is a fairly common speech disorder. However, the etiology is poorly understood...
People who stutter, especially children, have often been reported to exhibit a wide range of concomi...
People who stutter, especially children, have often been reported to exhibit a wide range of concomi...
People who stutter, especially children, have often been reported to exhibit a wide range of concomi...
This study investigated the change of eight CWS's dysfluencies according to modification of articula...
AbstractSpeech-language pathologists have reported increased evidence of co-occurring stuttering and...
Purpose: To investigate the holistic versus incremental phonological encoding processes of young chi...
Purpose: To investigate the holistic versus incremental phonological encoding processes of young chi...
Background: One language-related area that has recently received more attention from researchers wor...
PURPOSE: To identify and describe the speech rate and fluency of children with phonological disorder...
Purpose To compare articulation and speech rates of school-aged children who do and do not stutter a...
Purpose To compare articulation and speech rates of school-aged children who do and do not stutter a...
Normally developing and phonologically disordered 3 and 4year -old children (groups N and P) were co...