Jackson Eric S, Yaruss J Scott, Quesal Robert W, Terranova Valerie, Whalen D H
The Graduate Center of the City University of New York, United States.
University of Pittsburgh, United States.
J Fluency Disord. 2015 Sep;45:38-51. doi: 10.1016/j.jfludis.2015.05.002. Epub 2015 May 23.
Many people who stutter experience the phenomenon of anticipation-the sense that stuttering will occur before it is physically and overtly realized. A systematic investigation of how people who stutter respond to anticipation has not been previously reported. The purposes of this study were to provide self-report evidence of what people do in response to anticipation of stuttering and to determine the extent to which this anticipation occurs.
Thirty adults who stutter indicated on a Likert rating scale the extent to which they anticipate stuttering and answered three open-ended (written) questions regarding how they respond to anticipation.
All participants reported experiencing anticipation at least "sometimes," and 77% of the participants reported experiencing anticipation "often" or "always." The extent to which participants reported experiencing anticipation was not related to stuttering severity, impact, or treatment history. Analysis of written responses revealed 24 major categories, which were heuristically divided into action or non-action responses. Categories representing avoidance and self-management strategies were further divided into 14 and 19 subcategories, respectively. Participants were just as likely to view anticipation as helpful as they were to view it as harmful.
Findings demonstrate that most, if not all, adults who stutter experience anticipation, and the majority of adults who stutter report doing so at least often. Adults who stutter respond to this anticipation by altering the speech production process in various ways. Results highlight the importance of the role that anticipation plays in how stuttering behaviors manifest themselves.
The reader will be able to: (a) summarize existing literature on the anticipation of stuttering; (b) describe the role and extent of anticipation of stuttering in adults; (c) describe the various ways that adults who stutter respond to anticipation; (d) describe the importance of measuring anticipation in clinical and research domains.
许多口吃者会经历预期现象,即在口吃实际发生并明显表现出来之前就有口吃将会发生的感觉。此前尚未有关于口吃者如何应对预期的系统调查报道。本研究的目的是提供自我报告证据,说明人们在应对口吃预期时会采取什么行为,并确定这种预期出现的程度。
30名成年口吃者通过李克特量表指出他们预期口吃的程度,并回答了三个关于他们如何应对预期的开放式(书面)问题。
所有参与者均报告至少“有时”会经历预期,77%的参与者报告“经常”或“总是”经历预期。参与者报告经历预期的程度与口吃严重程度、影响或治疗史无关。对书面回答的分析揭示了24个主要类别,从启发式角度可分为行动或非行动反应。代表回避和自我管理策略的类别分别进一步细分为14个和19个子类别。参与者认为预期有益和有害的可能性相同。
研究结果表明,大多数(如果不是全部的话)成年口吃者会经历预期,并且大多数成年口吃者报告至少经常如此。成年口吃者通过以各种方式改变言语产生过程来应对这种预期。结果突出了预期在口吃行为表现方式中所起作用的重要性。
读者将能够:(a)总结关于口吃预期的现有文献;(b)描述口吃预期在成年人中的作用和程度;(c)描述成年口吃者应对预期的各种方式;(d)描述在临床和研究领域测量预期的重要性。