Namasivayam Aravind Kumar, van Lieshout Pascal
Oral Dynamics Laboratory, Department of Speech-Language Pathology, University of Toronto, 160-500 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G 1V7.
J Fluency Disord. 2008 Mar;33(1):32-51. doi: 10.1016/j.jfludis.2007.11.005. Epub 2007 Nov 29.
In this exploratory study, we investigated whether or not people who stutter (PWS) show motor practice and learning changes similar to those of people who do not stutter (PNS). To this end, five PWS and five PNS repeated a set of non-words at two different rates (normal and fast) across three test sessions (T1, T2 on the same day and T3 on a separate day, at least 1 week apart). The results indicated that PWS and PNS may resemble each other on a number of performance variables (such as movement amplitude and duration), but they differ in terms of practice and learning on variables that relate to movement stability and strength of coordination patterns. These findings are interpreted in support of recent claims about speech motor skill limitations in PWS.
The reader will be able to: (1) define oral articulatory changes associated with motor practice and learning and their measurement; (2) summarize findings from previous studies examining motor practice and learning in PWS; and (3) discuss hypotheses that could account for the present findings that suggest PWS and PNS differ in their speech motor learning abilities.
在这项探索性研究中,我们调查了口吃者(PWS)是否表现出与非口吃者(PNS)相似的运动练习和学习变化。为此,五名口吃者和五名非口吃者在三个测试阶段(T1、同一天的T2以及至少相隔1周的单独一天的T3)以两种不同速率(正常和快速)重复一组非单词。结果表明,口吃者和非口吃者在一些表现变量(如运动幅度和持续时间)上可能相似,但在与运动稳定性和协调模式强度相关的变量的练习和学习方面存在差异。这些发现被解释为支持最近关于口吃者言语运动技能局限性的说法。
读者将能够:(1)定义与运动练习和学习相关的口腔发音变化及其测量方法;(2)总结先前研究中关于口吃者运动练习和学习的发现;(3)讨论能够解释当前研究结果的假设,这些结果表明口吃者和非口吃者在言语运动学习能力上存在差异。