Disfluency Clusters in Speakers With and Without Neurogenic Stuttering Following Traumatic Brain Injury

ConclusionsCompared to non-stuttering speakers, stuttering after TBI did not increase the number of clusters, but rather lengthened them. In speakers with neurogenic stuttering, the number and length of clusters were related to the manifestation of other communication deficits, not to the frequency of stuttering-like disfluencies. Still, SLD clusters occurred only in those people with neurogenic stuttering. These findings raise questions about the nature of both neurogenic stuttering and the dynamics of disfluency clustering.
Source: Journal of Fluency Disorders - Category: Speech-Language Pathology Source Type: research