Chapter 8: Fluency Disorders

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33 Terms

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Speech Language Testing
________- receptive and expressive vocabulary /language skills, articulation.
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Fluency
speech that is effortless, easy, rhythmical, evenly flowing
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Disfluency
speech with phrase repetitions, interjections (fillers in speech), pauses, revisions
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Speech disfluencies
interfere with the ability to communicate effectively and may cause the speakers to have negative emotional reactions
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Stuttering
high number or duration of repetitions, prolongations, and/or blockages that interrupt speech
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Stuttering is often combined with
excessive mental and physical effort to resume talking (struggle)
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Stutters may have a
Negative perception of their communication abilities, low self-esteem
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Core behaviors of primary stuttering
repetitions, prolongations, blocks
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Prolongations
stretch out a sound for the long period of time ex
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Blocks
silent prolongations (car, hold tongue tightly in the /k/ positions)
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Secondary stuttering behaviors
counterproductive adaptations that started out as a way to help the stutterer
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Person who stutters has
more negative concepts about themselves, high levels of concerns regarding their speech
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Less efficient motor systems
may contribute to stuttering
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Stuttering-like disfluencies
3/100 words
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Demands and Capacity Model (DCM)
disfluencies are likely to occur in childrens speech when there is an imbalance between the demands for fluency and the childs capacity to produce fluent speech
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Growth spurt
motor speech control, language, cognition and temperament
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Chronic stuttering
used to refer to individuals who stutter into adulthood
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Genetics
natural recovery is more likely in children who do not have relatives who stutter
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Negative Feelings and Attitudes
feeling that stuttering controls the person
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Avoidance
avoid certain sounds/words/speaking situations
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Difficulties with Speech Motor Control
evidence of unusual patterns of breathing, vocalizing, and speaking even when they are not stuttering; variance of rate
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Difficulties with Language Formation
linguistic variables such as phonology, semantics, and syntax may contribute to stuttering
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Screening
hearing, OME, voice quality
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Speech/Language Testing
receptive and expressive vocabulary/language skills, articulation
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Feelings and Attitudes
Scales that patients self-report
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Stuttering Modification
helps the stutterer change his stuttering so that it is relaxed and easy
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Fluency Shaping
establish a fluent manner of speaking that replaces stuttering
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Charles Van Riper (1960s)
a founding father of speech pathology, specifically articulation and stuttering
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Cancellations
stuttering is modified after a stuttered word is completed
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Pull outs
stuttering is modified within the moment of stuttering
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Preparatory Set
modify the stuttering before it occurs
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"Turtle talk"
slow easy onset
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Cluttering
rapid bursts of dysrhythmic, unintelligible speech