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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.35 1024-1032 October 1992.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Error Monitoring in People Who Stutter

Evidence Against Auditory Feedback Defect Theories

Albert Postma 1
Herman Kolk 1

1 The Nijmegen Institute for Cognition Research and Information Technology Nijmegen, The Netherlands

Several theories purport that people who stutter suffer a speech-auditory feedback defect. The disordered feedback creates the illusion that some kind of error has intruded into the speech flow. Stuttering then results from actions aimed to correct the suspected, but nonexistent, error. These auditory feedback defect theories thus predict deviant error detection performance in people who stutter during speech production. To test this prediction, subjects who stuttered and those who did not had to detect self-produced (phonemic) speech errors while speaking with normal auditory feedback and with the auditory feedback masked by white noise. The two groups did not differ significantly in error detection accuracy and speed, nor in false alarm scores. This opposes auditory feedback defect theories and suggests that the self-monitoring processes of people who stutter function normally. In a condition in which errors had to be detected in other-produced speech, i.e., while listening to a tape recording, subjects who stuttered did detect fewer errors. Whether this might signal some general phonological problem is discussed.

KEY WORDS: error monitoring, stuttering, monitoring loops, auditory feedback

Submitted on September 17, 1991
Accepted on March 10, 1992


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