The Predictable Variability of Stuttering Flashcards
Variability Within and Across Words
Brown's 4 Factors: Phonetic Factors Grammatical Class Sentence Position Word Length
Phonetic Factors
more likely to be initial sounds and consonants
Grammatical Class
more likely to occur on nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs
Sentence position
more likely to occur in 1st 3 words or 1st sound/syllable
Word length
more likely to occur on words that are 5+ letters long
How could this research help with assessment and treatment?
- can identify subtypes of stuttering
- can manipulate treatment to assessment
- sounds that are more difficult may change in lifetime
Variability across conditions
Conditions that increase stuttering:
- increasing audience size (with warning)
- authority figures (not consistent)
- grammatical factors (Brown)
- Telephone (self-reported)
Minor conditions that decrease stuttering
PWS rated conditions when they stutter more or less often
- almost every condition received a 4 (no stuttering) by at least 1 PWS
- almost every condition received a rating of 1 (stutter as normal) by at least 1 PWS
Adaptation Effect (minor condition)
Re-reading same short, material out loud over and over decreases stuttering by about 50% for most PWS after 5 consecutive readings
- must be same material and be read aloud
- Don’t know why it works
- May be due to speech control control/mechanisms getting used to the movements, decreased anxiety, increased demands from repetition
Major conditions that decrease stuttering
Fluency inducing conditions (FICs)
Variability across speakers
Is it reasonable to define subgroups/subtypes of PWS?
- need more research; not really a subgroup with 1 difference between other PWS
Are subgroups helpful?
- Yes; different treatment for different groups
- Yes; similarities between large groups can be separated into small groups for further evaluation
Anticipation Effects
Anticipatory apprehensive hypertonic avoidance reaction
- stuttering is effort to avoid stuttering
- 85-90% of time PWS predicted they would stutter they were right (some say 100%)
Great variability across speakers
Variability within and across words (Wingate)
Emphasize syllabic stress as a factor in stuttering
- 41-50% of 1st 3 words were stuttered
- 51% of stressed later syllables were stuttered
- 15% of unstressed later syllables were stuttered
Van Riper loci: when there’s stress, content words, difficult words in general; leads to stress; leads to more stuttering