Stuttering

speech disorder in which the flow of speech is disrupted by involuntary repetitions and prolongations of sounds, syllables, words, or phrases as well as involuntary silent pauses or blocks in which the person who stutters is unable to produce sounds
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This page is about speech problems, the album can be found at Hands All Over

Stuttering or stammering is a problem of speech. It is a speech disorder some people have. Five to six percent of children have a stammer while one percent of adults have a stammer. Men are four times more likely to have a stammer than women. Stammers normally start at 2-6 years and run in families.

Stuttering
Other namesStammering, alalia syllabaris, alalia literalis, anarthria literalis, dysphemia.[1]
Pronunciation
Medical specialtySpeech-language pathology
SymptomsUnwanted sound repetition and disruption or blocking of speech
ComplicationsShame, bullying, social anxiety, fear of public speaking
Usual onset2–5 years
DurationLong term
CausesUnknown
Differential diagnosisdysphonia[1]
TreatmentSpeech therapy
MedicationDopamine antagonists
PrognosisUsually resolves by late childhood; 20% of cases last into adulthood
FrequencyAbout 1%

The person knows what they want to say but the flow of their speech is ‘bumpy’ and may have some of the following features:

  • Repetitions (of sounds, parts of words or phrases)
  • Blocks (stops before words)
  • Prolongations (making a sound longer, e.g. 'hhhhhhham' instead of 'ham')
  • Pauses
  • Rephrasing (saying something else instead)
  • Hesitations (struggling to say words)
  • Fillers (using key phrases such as ‘you know what I mean’ to hide their difficulties)
  • Tension (the muscles in their face and neck look tight)
  • Facial or body movements

Feelings and attitudes

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Stammering can be very upsetting, and knock a person's confidence. Joseph Sheehan compared stuttering to an iceberg, with the bumpy parts you can hear (overt parts) of stuttering above the waterline, and the larger block of how the person feels (covert parts) invisible below the surface. These people may feel embarrassment, shame, frustration, fear, anger, and guilt.[2] These feelings may increase stress and effort making the person stammer more. Such negative feelings may be an important part of a treatment program.[3] Stammers affect peoples lives. They may lack confidence to apply for job interviews or make friends.[4]

Treatment

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Stuttering therapy

Fluency shaping therapy

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This therapy is also known as "speak more fluently", "prolonged speech" or "connected speech." It trains stutterers to speak fluently (without the ‘bumpy bits’) by controlling their breathing and how they move their lips, jaw, and tongue. Stutterers are trained to slow down their speaking rate by stretching vowels and consonants. Other methods include soft speech contacts. This helps to make very slow but non bumpy speech used only in the speech clinic. To make more normal sounding speech for daily life speed of speech is increased. Many people find their speech does not sound natural at the end of therapy. Fluency shaping approaches are normally taught in groups therapy programs, which may take two to three weeks to complete. More recently the Camperdown program, using a much shorter schedule, has been shown to work well.

Stuttering modification therapy

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The goal of stuttering modification therapy is not to get rid of stuttering but to change it so that stuttering is easier and less stressful. As fear and worry make people stutter by getting rid of these feelings stuttering will decrease. The most widely known approach was made by Charles Van Riper in 1973 and is also known as block modification therapy. Stuttering modification therapy has four stages:[5]

  • In the first stage, called identification, the stutterer and speech and language therapist work out the core behaviours, secondary behaviors, and feelings that make the stuttering.
  • In the second stage, called desensitization, the stutterer works to reduce fear and anxiety. This is done by freezing stuttering behaviors, confronting difficult sounds, words and situations, and stuttering on purpose ("voluntary stuttering").
  • In the third stage, called modification, the stutterer learns "easy stuttering." This is done by "cancellations" (stopping in a stammer, waiting a few moments, and saying the word again); "pull-outs," or pulling out of a stammer into ‘normal’ speech; and "preparatory sets," or looking ahead for words they may stutter on, and using "easy stuttering" on those words.
  • In the fourth stage, called stabilization, the stutterer prepares practice assignments, makes preparatory sets and pull-outs automatic, and changes how they feel about themselves from being a person who stutters to being a person who speaks fluently but who sometimes stutters mildly.

Famous stutterers

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There were many famous stutterers:

Evolutionary note

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Features developed later in evolution are usually more variable than features developed earlier. The classic example of this principle is the difficulties of many human births compared to the reliability of ape births. Languages in hominids is certainly one of their later accomplishments.[14]

Sources

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  • Guitar, Barry (2005). Stuttering: An Integrated Approach to Its Nature and Treatment. San Diego: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. ISBN 978-0-7817-3920-7.
  • Ward, David (2006). Stuttering and Cluttering: Frameworks for understanding treatment. Hove and New York City: Psychology Press. ISBN 978-1-84169-334-7.
  • Fraser, Jane (2005). If Your Child Stutters: A Guide for Parents. Stuttering Foundation of America. ISBN 978-0-933388-44-4.

References

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  1. 1.0 1.1 GREENE, J. S. (1937-07-01). "Dysphemia and Dysphonia: Cardinal Features of Three Types of Functional Syndrome: Stuttering, Aphonia and Falsetto (Male)". Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery. 26 (1). American Medical Association (AMA): 74–82. doi:10.1001/archotol.1937.00650020080011. ISSN 0886-4470.
  2. Ward D. 2006. Stuttering and cluttering: frameworks for understanding and treatment. Hove: Taylor & Francis: Psychology Press
  3. Guitar,' B. ('2006)'. Stuttering: An integrated approach to its nature and treatment (3rd ed.). Baltimore, MD: Williams & Wilkins.
  4. NYTimes - To fight stuttering, doctors look at the brain (Pollak, Andrew; Sept. 12, 2006)
  5. Ward, D. (2006). Stuttering and cluttering: frameworks for understanding and treatment. Hove: Taylor & Francis: Psychology Press
  6. Garfinkel, H. A. (1995). "Why did Moses stammer? And, was Moses left-handed?". Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 88 (5): 256–257. PMC 1295194. PMID 7636817.
  7. Montgomery, James Edward (2004). ʻAbbasid Studies: Occasional Papers of the School of ʻAbbasid Studies, Cambridge, 6-10 July 2002. Peeters Publishers. ISBN 9789042914339.
  8. https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ExbdVf5fFmUC&pg=PT161&dq=Uthman+tongue-tied&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&source=gb_mobile_search&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjXz_Tn64OEAxXaiv0HHfz3Bb4Q6AF6BAgGEAM#v=onepage&q&f=false
  9. Al-Jibouri, Yasin T. (September 2011). Kerbala and Beyond: An Epic of Immortal Heroism. Author House. ISBN 9781467026130.
  10. "About Stuttering".
  11. Lennon, Jack J. (2014). Pollution and Religion in Ancient Rome. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107037908.
  12. Pope, Charles N. (24 September 2017). "Jesus Among the Julio-Claudians".
  13. "Stuttering was also in antiquity « IMPERIUM ROMANUM".
  14. Murphy E. & Benítez-Burraco A. 2017. Paleo-oscillomics: inferring aspects of Neanderthal language abilities from gene regulation of neural oscillations. Journal of Anthropological Sciences'. 96: 111–124.