Affiliation:
1. Academic Hospital, Utrecht
Abstract
In this study the onset and offset times of seven types of accessory facial movements during oral and silent prolongations were described in three severe stutterers. For each observed facial movement the onset and offset times were determined by means of slow motion analysis of video-recorded speech samples. For two of the three subjects significant differences in the onset and offset times at the various facial movements were found; however, no consistent patterns in the separate facial movements could be observed. On the contrary, the onset of most facial movements appeared to be located at the very start and their offset at the end of the stuttering event, indicating that most facial movements accompany the entire stuttering moment. The implications of these findings with respect to the function of accessory facial movements in stuttering ate discussed.
Subject
Sensory Systems,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Reference5 articles.
1. ARE the Accessory Facial Movements of the Stutterer Learned Behaviours?
2. Wingate M. E. Stuttering: Theory and treatment. New York: Irvington, 1976. Pp. 48–50.
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