what is fluency?
the consistent ability to move the speech production mechanism in an effortless, smooth, and rapid manner resulting in a continuous uninterrupted flow of speech
examples of some disorders that interrupt fluency
sound repetitions are most frequently associated with….
severe stuttering
example of sound repetition
b-b-boy
example of syllable repetition
be-be-before
word repetition example
the-the-the boy
where do sound repetitions usually occur?
in the initial position of a word
phrase repetitions
the boy, the boy
prolongations
- mostly occur on vowels and semi vowels
example of prolongation
thhhhhhaaaaaaaaa booooooy
blocks
the_____________boy
*most severe manifestations of stuttering
revisions
the boy, the guy
what is the normal age range for kids to stutter?
3 Y O
+/- 6 months
why do kids stutter?
speech and language skills are catching up to cognitive skills
developmental stuttering
occurs in the course of speech language development without any known trauma or neurological event
neurogenic stuttering
occurs after some form of trauma to the nervous system such as accident or disease
bloodstein’s stages
what is avoidance?
the consequence of stuttering
-people avoid situations in which stuttering is likely to occur
secondary features
behaviors that accompany stuttering although they don’t directly relate to speech
-dont have a positive affect on fluency
common secondary features
organic theory of stuttering
- brain imaging lends SOME support
behavioral theory
psychological theory
linguistic theory