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Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research Vol.41 1265-1281 December 1998.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Adaptation of Stuttering Frequency During Repeated Readings

Associated Changes in Acoustic Parameters of Perceptually Fluent Speech

Ludo Max 1
Anthony J. Caruso 1

1 Kent State University Ohio

maxludo{at}shu.edu

This study is part of a series investigating the hypothesis that stuttering adaptation is a result of motor learning. Previous investigations indicate that nonspeech motor learning typically is associated with an increase in speed of performance. Previous investigations of stuttering, on the other hand, indicate that improvements in fluency during most fluency-enhancing conditions or after stuttering treatment tend to be associated with decreased speech rate, increased duration of specific acoustic segments, and decreased vowel duration variability. The present acoustic findings, obtained from 8 individuals who stutter, reveal that speech adjustments occurring during adaptation differ from those reported for other fluency-enhancing conditions or stuttering treatment. Instead, the observed changes are consistent with those occurring during skill improvements for nonspeech motor tasks and, thus, with a motor learning hypothesis of stuttering adaptation. During the last of 6 repeated readings, a statistically significant increase in articulation rate was observed, together with a decrease in word duration, vowel duration, and consonant-vowel (CV) transition extent. Other adjustments showing relatively consistent trends across individual subjects included decreased CV transition rate and duration, and increased variability of both CV transition extent and vowel duration.

KEY WORDS: stuttering, adaptation, acoustic analysis, motor learning, variability

Submitted on March 9, 1998
Accepted on July 30, 1998







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