Department of Speech, Language, Hearing Sciences, Purdue University, 1353 Heavilon Hall, West Lafayette, IN 47907-1353, United States.
J Fluency Disord. 2010 Mar;35(1):1-18. doi: 10.1016/j.jfludis.2009.12.001. Epub 2009 Dec 22.
The potential role of phonological complexity in destabilizing the speech motor systems of adults who stutter was explored by assessing the performance of 17 adults who stutter and 17 matched control participants on a nonword repetition task. The nonwords varied in length and phonological complexity. Behavioral results revealed no differences between the stuttering and normally fluent groups on accuracy of nonword repetition. In contrast, dramatic differences between groups were observed in the kinematic data. Indices of the consistency of inter-articulator coordination revealed that adults who stutter were much less consistent in their coordinative patterns over repeated productions. With increasing length and complexity of the nonwords, between-group differences in coordinative consistency were more pronounced. Coordination consistency measures revealed that adults who stutter (but not normally fluent adults) showed within-session practice effects; their coordinative consistency improved in five later compared to five earlier productions. Adults who stutter produced the nonwords at a slower rate, but both groups showed increased rates of production on the later trials, indicating a practice effect for duration for both groups. We conclude that, though the adults who stutter performed behaviorally with the same accuracy as normally fluent adults, the nonword repetition task reveals remarkable differences in the speech motor dynamics underlying fluent speech production in adults who stutter compared to their normally fluent peers. These results support a multifactorial, dynamic model of stuttering in which linguistic complexity and utterance length are factors that contribute to the probability of breakdown of the speech motor system.
After reading this article, the reader will be able to: (1) summarize the literature on potential language/motor interactions in stuttering, and (2) evaluate to what extent the study findings support the hypothesis that phonologically complex utterances have a destabilizing effect on the speech motor system in individuals who stutter.
通过评估 17 名口吃者和 17 名匹配的对照组参与者在非词重复任务中的表现,探索语音复杂性对口吃者言语运动系统的潜在不稳定作用。非词在长度和语音复杂性上有所不同。行为结果显示,口吃组和正常流利组在非词重复的准确性上没有差异。相比之下,组间在运动学数据上存在显著差异。关节间协调一致性的指标表明,口吃者在重复产生时协调模式的一致性要低得多。随着非词长度和复杂性的增加,组间在协调一致性方面的差异更为明显。协调一致性测量显示,口吃者(但不是正常流利者)在会话内表现出练习效应;他们的协调一致性在五个后期生产中比五个早期生产中有所提高。口吃者的语速较慢,但两组在后期试验中都增加了语速,表明两组的时长都有练习效应。我们得出结论,尽管口吃者在行为上的表现与正常流利者一样准确,但非词重复任务揭示了口吃者与正常流利者相比,流畅言语产生的言语运动动力学方面存在显著差异。这些结果支持了口吃的多因素、动态模型,其中语言复杂性和话语长度是导致言语运动系统崩溃概率增加的因素。
阅读本文后,读者将能够:(1)总结关于口吃中潜在语言/运动相互作用的文献,(2)评估研究结果在多大程度上支持这样一种假设,即语音复杂的话语对口吃者的言语运动系统有不稳定作用。