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Neurogenic stuttering versus developmental stuttering

Journal of Communication Disorders, 2001
J Van Borsel
exaly   +2 more sources

Tics and developmental stuttering

Parkinsonism and Related Disorders, 2003
Developmental stuttering affects 1% of the population but its cause remains unclear. Recent PET studies of metabolism in the central nervous system suggest that it may be related to dysfunction in the basal ganglia or its connections with regions of the cortex associated with speech and motor control.To determine the presence and characteristics of ...
Hilda Mulligan   +2 more
exaly   +3 more sources

fMRI of developmental stuttering: A pilot study

Brain and Language, 2003
The purpose of this investigation was to explore the feasibility of fMRI in the study of developmental stuttering. Speech contrasts (loud versus silent reading) and language contrasts (reading of semantically meaningful text versus nonsense words) of six developmental stutterers and six nonstutterers were compared using a commercial 1 Tesla MR-Scanner (
John Van Borsel   +2 more
exaly   +3 more sources

Fluoxetine for Persistent Developmental Stuttering

Clinical Neuropharmacology, 2007
Stuttering is a disturbance in the normal fluency and time patterning of speech. Developmental stuttering (DS), with or without associated psychiatric illness, is the most common form and includes all cases with gradual onset in childhood that are not the result of acquired brain damage.
Amardeep, Kumar, Sabish, Balan
openaire   +2 more sources

Developmental Stuttering

Pediatric Annals, 2003
Pediatricians often are the first health care professional parents turn to when they are concerned their child may be stuttering. At this point, the pediatrician can direct parents to a number of available resources for more information and also can provide referral to a speech-language pathologist who has undergone graduate training and received ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Neurogenic stuttering versus developmental stuttering: An observer's judgement study

Journal of Fluency Disorders, 2000
It has been claimed by some but rejected by others that neurogenic stuttering has unique features that distinguish this type of dysfluency from developmental stuttering. An experiment is reported in which a panel of professionals was presented at random speech samples from four developmental and four neurogenic stutterers and was asked to classify them
J, Van Borsel, C, Taillieu
openaire   +2 more sources

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