Term
5 major variables affecting stuttering |
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Definition
anticipation/expectancy, consistency, adjacency, loci of stuttering, situational factors |
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Term
Anticipation of stuttering |
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Definition
feeling of knowing MOS will occur, 90% accuracy; school age children and younger not as good (begins around 10) |
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Term
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Definition
tendency to stutter on the same words during successive readings (60-70%; functors more variable); suggests that content plays a role in distribution of stuttering |
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Term
Effect of severity on consistency |
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Definition
increased severity demonstrates increased consistency |
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Definition
tendency for words blotted out in a reading to cause stuttering on neighboring words; anticipation and blotted words serve as cues? |
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Term
Loci of Stuttering (general definition) |
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Definition
linguistic attributes of stuttered words; properties of their sounds, syllables, words |
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Term
4 factors of loci of stuttering |
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Definition
initial sound; sentence position (first 3 words); word length (5 phones or longer); grammatical class |
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3 additional factors for loci |
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Definition
word frequency (low freq=more stuttering) predictability (low=more stuttering) linguistic stress (stressed=increase in stuttering) |
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Term
5 Situational factors affecting stuttering |
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Definition
communicative pressure, attention, suggestion, tension/anxiety, cue-related conditions |
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Definition
increases with audience size; less responsibility in the conversation=decrease in stuttering |
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Definition
distractors from speech tend to reduce stuttering (whisper, dialect), but transient effect |
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Definition
hypnosis=transient decrease; decrease if tell them they stutter, but doesn't last |
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Definition
increases stuttering; intense emotion decreases stuttering (i.e. yelling when angry) |
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Definition
based on past difficulty (telephone, reading aloud) |
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Term
Three theories regarding tendency |
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Definition
conditioned responses, statistical uncertainty, linguistic properties |
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Definition
consistency suggests that stuttering is a response to identifiable stimuli; something about the way the sounds set feels becomes associated with stuttering, so anticipation causing stuttering and aversion |
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Definition
stuttering tends to repeatedly occur on conspicuous, important, salient aspects of speech (high uncertainty=large amount of new information in speech=increase in stuttering) |
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Term
linguistic properties affecting consistency |
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Definition
certain types of words tend to convey the most information; content words end to be longer, begin with consonants and occur early in a phrase, so increased linguistic property value |
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Term
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Definition
stuttering occurs when the next sound, syllable, or word requires a choice (lexical or grammatical); decreased predictability, increased uncertainty |
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Term
3 types of stuttering phenomenon |
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Definition
adaptation effect, auditory stimulation, repeated rhythmic stimulation |
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Term
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Definition
stuttering decreases upon repeated readings of the same material (words stuttered on remain same); on average 50-60% reduction; longer break=less adaptation; not influenced by fatigue |
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Term
spontaneous recovery as it relates to adaptation |
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Definition
the tendency for stuttering to increase to its previous level after at least a four hour delay between readings |
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Definition
adaptation occurs because the expectation that stuttering will be horrible is not confirmed |
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Definition
decrease in stuttering in the presence of a high intensity white noise of low frequency and high amplitude; must be on most if not all of speaking time; changes speech as an accommodation effect? |
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Term
delayed auditory feedback |
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Definition
stuttering decreases when the vocal output of stutterers is returned via earphones at a slight delay; highly variable |
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Term
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Definition
uses DAF; expensive, research only done by creators; causes rate effect and unnatural speech sound; takes responsibility off of the speaker; more benefit in reading than conversation |
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Definition
speaking in time to rhythmic beat=dramatic decrease in stuttering; slowed rate, changes speech, breaks speech into smaller units, decreases demand |
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Definition
unison speech, slows rate and decreases stuttering, reduces pressure and responsibility |
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Term
motor theories of stuttering |
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Definition
timing and coordination of speech subsystems is disordered |
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Term
problems with studying only within MOS |
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Definition
fluency is perceptually subjective (may not detect all moments); is it cause or symptom being observed? |
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Term
respiration affects with stuttering |
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Definition
abnormalities in respiratory movement during MOS |
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Term
phonation affects with stuttering |
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Definition
VF inappropriately ab(d)ducted; restricted range of F0 and longer VOT |
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Term
articulation affects with stuttering |
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Definition
subtle difficulties in transitions (coartic)=planning or execution disorder?; excessive muscular activity and poor movement corrdination; reduced articulatory rate/initiation and duration of phones (not seen at onset in children) |
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Term
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Definition
may have different ways of initiating or controlling speech movements; stability and strength of movement coordination may be reduced (limited speech motor skills); limited practice and learning of motor skills |
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Definition
PWS initiate complex motor coordination tasks more slowly and less accurately |
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Definition
perform poorly on central auditory processing tasks; difficulties precessing tactile and visual information when highly mixed/closely similar |
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Term
structural neurological differences? |
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Definition
in Broca's, motor speech, language, emotion areas; increased area of R planum temporale; abnormal lateralization?; decreased gray matter in L frontal gyrus and bilateral temporal region |
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Term
problems with neurostructural studies |
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Definition
no theoretical framework; it's a known that it's a neurological problem, so what is being learned |
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Term
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Definition
children are predisposed to stutter by a conflict between the cerebral hemispheres for control of speech; deviation from natural handedness |
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Definition
lack of dominance=poor synchronization=speech breakdown; functional independence causes conflict between hemispheres |
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Term
motor programming disorder (disordered timing) |
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Definition
speech is a function of interrelated systems; problem is coordination between systems, disruption in motor programming leads to disruption in components of speech |
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Implication of timing theories |
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Definition
cerebral dominance=timing influenced by lack of dominance disordered timing=poor programming between systems |
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Term
4 common features of temperament |
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Definition
mood/adaptability, stability within individual across situations, biologically based, interacts with/affected by the environment |
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Definition
hypersensitive, inhibited/introverted, less willing to take risks, anxious; gradual in adaptability, less distractible, more irregular with biological functions |
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effect of low adaptability |
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Definition
less interaction with environment=less opportunity for interaction/speech practicing/output; social difficulty; increases stuttering |
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effects of low distractability |
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Definition
more apt to focus on MOS or other speech errors |
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effect of biological irregularity |
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Definition
increases anxiety and stress and fatigue |
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Definition
lower in self-acceptance, less inclined to take risks, more likely to set lower goals |
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Definition
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Definition
chronic state of an individual |
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Definition
associated with individual situations |
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Term
three roles of anxiety in stuttering |
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Definition
1-main factor in etiology and maintenance, 2-aggravates stuttering, 3-results from stuttering; 1-2 must address anxiety to relieve stuttering, 3 reduction in stuttering decreases anxiety |
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Term
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Definition
extent to which person perceives events as being a result of his/her own behavior vs. influences outside his/her control |
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Definition
lends to be external; 97% who relapse after tx have external locus of control--predictor of likelihood for tx maintenance? |
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Term
ways to develop an internal locus |
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Definition
re-defining success and failure, becoming an expert, peer mentoring and support, improve knowledge, responding to bullying and teasing, voluntary stuttering, advertising |
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Term
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Definition
only seen in language related skills as a result of stuttering |
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Term
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Definition
more apt to grow up in families who are less harmonious, less sociable, less formally educated, lower intelligence, etc (environment with increased anxiety) |
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Definition
more overprotective/overanxious, unfavorable image of child's stuttering, react with disapproval/negative criticism |
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Term
effect of slowed parental speech rate |
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Definition
increases turn taking latency=decrease in stuttering; increase in interruption=increase in stuttering; decrease in rate=decrease in stuttering |
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Term
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Definition
all children stutter, if parents call attention to it, they become chronic stutterers (causes anxiety and attempts to change speech), if not, the child is TD |
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Term
demands and capacity model |
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Definition
considers internal capacity for fluency as well as environmental demands; stuttering occurs when capacity does not meet demand=increased struggle and tension=disfluency |
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Term
four major capacities of speech |
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Definition
speech motor control, language development, social and emotional functioning, cognitive skills (dynamic; inherited tendency) |
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Term
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Definition
pressure to talk quickly, competition, excitement/anxiety (can be internal or external) |
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Term
implications of demands and capacities model for assessment |
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Definition
attempt to assess various capacities and demands; examine child and parent rate, examine grammatical complexity, get info on home life |
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Term
implications of demands and capacities model for tx |
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Definition
try to modify environment to reduce demands; modify child's behavior to increase capacity |
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Term
advantages and disadvantages of demands and capacities model |
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Definition
advantages-incorporates multiple factors, easy to explain to parents disadvantages-difficult to test; redundant in meaning (of course the child doesn't meet the capacity if stuttering) |
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Term
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Definition
no single cause, rather complex interaction/mix of linguistic, cognitive, motor, emotional, and sociocultural |
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Term
3 characteristics of multifactorial model |
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Definition
factors are dynamic (change over time), characteristics present to different degrees in different individuals, doesn't take much change in a single factor/interaction to disrupt system |
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Term
advantages and disadvantages of multifactorial model |
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Definition
advantages-complexity, accounts for variability, stuttering is not pathological concern, but variant of normal characteristics disadvantages-suggests motor system as core mechanism, can't test, broad and difficult to determine causality |
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Term
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Definition
environmental events previously unrelated to a stimulus eventually evoke the original stimulus response |
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Term
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Definition
changes in behavior are the result of an individual's response to events in the environment (elements=response and consequence); learning as a function of behavior |
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Term
unwanted side effects of punishment in operant conditioning |
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Definition
avoidance behaviors, escape behaviors, emotional responses |
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Term
stuttering as an operant response |
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Definition
increased awareness and distraction equals decrease in stuttering, but not necessarily direct cause of punishment or reinforcement |
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Term
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Definition
PWS tend to stutter more or less in certain situations (classical conditioning may play a role in the development of stuttering i.e. talking on the phone causes anxiety and stuttering, so a phone alone causes anxiety of stuttering) |
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Term
conditioning effect on secondary behaviors |
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Definition
operant conditioning may play a role in the acquisition of secondary behaviors because physical response becomes linked to consequence of escape from MOS |
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Term
word and situational avoidances |
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Definition
both classical and operant (maintenance) conditioning may play a role in word and situational avoidances |
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Term
Response contingent time-out |
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Definition
break from speaking, decreases stuttering (less than 30 second effect) only words with direct contingency |
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Term
Extended length of utterance (ELU) |
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Definition
token economy, increases fluency in short phrases |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
parent led; positive reinforcement or reattempt for fluency on a fixed schedule; researched by developers |
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Term
limitations of operant approaches |
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Definition
not widely used, follow-up data lacking, don't consider affective and cognitive aspects, no theoretical support |
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Term
disfluencies in TD children |
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Definition
tend to accompany emerging sentence structures, occur in more complex utterances; can be experimentally induced by manipulating syntactic demand |
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Term
Where/When does stuttering occur in CWS? |
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Definition
sentence initial words, longer and more syntactically complex utterances, utterances with more grammatical errors low frequency and unfamiliar words, initial phonemes and stressed syllables, utterances higher in lexical diversity, and function words (for young children) |
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Definition
high diversity increases stuttering |
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Term
disfluencies in SLI children |
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Definition
mostly normal disfluencies, but less fluent overall |
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Term
vocabulary and syntax in CWS |
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Definition
more grammatical errors, simpler/younger language, less lexical diversity |
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Definition
suggest problems with phonological working memory; less successful |
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Term
metalinguistic awareness in CWS |
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Definition
poor performance on grammatical awareness tasks |
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Term
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Definition
delay in acquiring complex forms of processing, slower in processes association with speech-language production; slow naming; levels of disfluency mirror levels of processing deficits? |
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Term
effect of increased complexity |
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Definition
leads to breakdowns in language; decreases lip stability, which affects motor output? |
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Term
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Definition
must be involved because stuttering only occurs when words are joined together |
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Term
effect of phonological tx on CWS |
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Definition
negative because draws focus to speech production and changes in it |
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Term
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Definition
designed to explain the production of speech differences for CWS v. CWNS in context of psycholinguistic models of speech production |
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Term
Levelt's Speech Production Model |
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Definition
Conceptual Preparation, Formulation (grammatical, morphophonological, and phonetic encoding), articulation, self-monitoring; several wasy to go about repair if errors detected along the chain |
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Term
Dell's Interactive Two-Step Model |
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Definition
several words activated based on presented semantic and phonological features; activation spreads back up to the target word to reinforce the selection process |
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Term
assumptions of the covert repair hypothesis |
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Definition
all speakers experience errors in phonetic plan; repairs result in disfluencies |
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Term
core impairment based on covert repair hypothesis |
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Definition
phonological encoding impairment; errors occur when the speaker attempts to produce speech at a rate faster than the phonological encoding system can work |
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Term
Strengths of Covert Repair Hypothesis |
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Definition
attempts to describe how different types of disfluencies occur (were in the system, how repaired?; explains disfluencies among CWS and CWNS |
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Term
Weakness of the Covert Repair Hypothesis |
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Definition
doesn't explain the time course of stuttering development or acquisition of secondary behaviors |
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Term
Neuropsycholinguistic Theory |
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Definition
language dissynchrony model; stuttering is a loss of control |
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Term
assumptions of the neuropsycholinguistic theory |
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Definition
timing is critical, speech involves linguistic and paralinguistic aspects, no distinguishment between SLDs and normal; control is key |
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Term
cause of stuttering in neuropsycholinguistic theory |
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Definition
disfluency=dyssnchrony; loss of control; time pressure; uncertainty |
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