Literature DB >> 17342878

Phonetic difficulty and stuttering in English.

Peter Howell1, James Au-Yeung, J Scott Yaruss, Kevin Eldridge.   

Abstract

Previous work has shown that phonetic difficulty affects older, but not younger, speakers who stutter and that older speakers experience more difficulty on content words than function words. The relationship between stuttering rate and a recently-developed index of phonetic complexity (IPC, Jakielski) was examined in this study separately for function and content words for speakers in 6-11, 11 plus-18 and 18 plus age groups. The hypothesis that stuttering rate on the content words of older speakers, but not younger speakers, would be related to the IPC score was supported. It is argued that the similarity between results using the IPC scores with a previous analysis that looked at late emerging consonants, consonant strings and multiple syllables (also conducted on function and content words separately), validates the former instrument. In further analyses, the factors that are most likely to lead to stuttering in English and their order of importance were established. The order found was consonant by manner, consonant by place, word length and contiguous consonant clusters. As the effects of phonetic difficulty are evident in teenage and adulthood, at least some of the factors may have an acquired influence on stuttering (rather than an innate universal basis, as the theory behind Jakielski's work suggests). This may be established in future work by doing cross-linguistic comparisons to see which factors operate universally. Disfluency on function words in early childhood appears to be responsive to factors other than phonetic complexity.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17342878      PMCID: PMC1885475          DOI: 10.1080/02699200500390990

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Linguist Phon        ISSN: 0269-9206            Impact factor:   1.346


  11 in total

1.  Exchange of stuttering from function words to content words with age.

Authors:  P Howell; J Au-Yeung; S Sackin
Journal:  J Speech Lang Hear Res       Date:  1999-04       Impact factor: 2.297

2.  Utterance length, syntactic complexity, and childhood stuttering.

Authors:  J S Yaruss
Journal:  J Speech Lang Hear Res       Date:  1999-04       Impact factor: 2.297

3.  The Iowa Articulation Norms Project and its Nebraska replication.

Authors:  A B Smit; L Hand; J J Freilinger; J E Bernthal; A Bird
Journal:  J Speech Hear Disord       Date:  1990-11

4.  INTERNAL STRUCTURE OF CONTENT WORDS LEADING TO LIFESPAN DIFFERENCES IN PHONOLOGICAL DIFFICULTY IN STUTTERING.

Authors:  Peter Howell; James Au-Yeung; Stevie Sackin
Journal:  J Fluency Disord       Date:  2000       Impact factor: 2.538

5.  When are speech sounds learned?

Authors:  E K Sander
Journal:  J Speech Hear Disord       Date:  1972-02

6.  Grammatical function in relation to stuttering in young children.

Authors:  O Bloodstein; B F Gantwerk
Journal:  J Speech Hear Res       Date:  1967-12

7.  Word familiarity, syllabic stress pattern, and stuttering.

Authors:  C P Hubbard; D Prins
Journal:  J Speech Hear Res       Date:  1994-06

8.  Early stutterings: some aspects of their form and distribution.

Authors:  O Bloodstein; M Grossman
Journal:  J Speech Hear Res       Date:  1981-06

9.  Relation between phonologic difficulty and the occurrence of disfluences in the early stage of stuttering.

Authors:  R N Throneburg; E Yairi; E P Paden
Journal:  J Speech Hear Res       Date:  1994-06

10.  Phonologic error distributions in the Iowa-Nebraska Articulation Norms Project: word-initial consonant clusters.

Authors:  A B Smit
Journal:  J Speech Hear Res       Date:  1993-10
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  8 in total

1.  The influence of phonetic complexity on stuttered speech.

Authors:  Geoffrey A Coalson; Courtney T Byrd; Barbara L Davis
Journal:  Clin Linguist Phon       Date:  2012-07       Impact factor: 1.346

2.  The effect of phonetic complexity on the speed of single-word productions in adults who do and do not stutter.

Authors:  Courtney T Byrd; Geoffrey A Coalson; Jie Yang; Kirsten Moriarty
Journal:  J Commun Disord       Date:  2017-06-16       Impact factor: 2.288

3.  Phonetic complexity of words immediately following utterance-initial productions in children who stutter.

Authors:  Geoffrey A Coalson; Courtney T Byrd
Journal:  J Fluency Disord       Date:  2015-11-02       Impact factor: 2.538

4.  Do individuals with fragile X syndrome show developmental stuttering or not? Comment on "Speech fluency in fragile X syndrome" by van Borsel, Dor and Rondal.

Authors:  Peter Howell
Journal:  Clin Linguist Phon       Date:  2008-02       Impact factor: 1.346

5.  Nonword repetition in adults who stutter: The effects of stimuli stress and auditory-orthographic cues.

Authors:  Geoffrey A Coalson; Courtney T Byrd
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-11-29       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Lexical priming of function words and content words with children who do, and do not, stutter.

Authors:  Ceri Savage; Peter Howell
Journal:  J Commun Disord       Date:  2008-03-10       Impact factor: 2.288

7.  A model of serial order problems in fluent, stuttered and agrammatic speech.

Authors:  Peter Howell
Journal:  Hum Mov Sci       Date:  2007-08-31       Impact factor: 2.161

8.  Simulating Speech Error Patterns Across Languages and Different Datasets.

Authors:  Sofia Strömbergsson; Jana Götze; Jens Edlund; Kristina Nilsson Björkenstam
Journal:  Lang Speech       Date:  2021-02-26       Impact factor: 1.500

  8 in total

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