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Stuttering: Discoordination of Phonation with Articulation and Respiration
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1976
Year
MusicRespiratory AdjustmentsHealth SciencesPhoneticsSpeech ProductionPhonatory CoordinationsSpeech Fluency DisorderNoiseAdult StutterersPhonationSpeech Motor ControlLanguage StudiesStutteringSpeech PerceptionPhonologyDevelopmental StutteringSpeech CommunicationSpeech Recognition
Complexity of phonatory and respiratory adjustments was systematically simplified in 30 adult stutterers under three speaking conditions: voiced, whispered, and articulated without phonation. Stuttering was reduced considerably when whispering and was practically eliminated when articulating silently. The possibility that stuttering consistently results from complexity of phonatory coordinations with articulation and respiration was strongly supported. Increased speaking rates under conditions that decreased stuttering seemed to be evidence that efficient rhythmical flow of speech is facilitated by simplification of phonatory and respiratory adjustments.