Associations between social anxiety, physiological reactivity, and speech disfluencies in autistic young adults and controls
CONCLUSIONS: SA or speaking-related physiological reactivity were not associated with disfluency frequencies or stuttering severity in autistic persons. Negative association between physiological reactivity and disfluency frequencies found in the control group may indicate that the physiological arousal may impact the speech production process by reducing the overt disfluencies.PMID:38593561 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2024.106425 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - April 9, 2024 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Veera Pirinen Kurt Eggers Katja Dindar Terhi Helminen Aija Kotila Sanna Kuusikko-Gauffin Leena M äkinen Hanna Ebeling Tuula Hurtig Mirjami M äntymaa Soile Loukusa Source Type: research

Associations between social anxiety, physiological reactivity, and speech disfluencies in autistic young adults and controls
CONCLUSIONS: SA or speaking-related physiological reactivity were not associated with disfluency frequencies or stuttering severity in autistic persons. Negative association between physiological reactivity and disfluency frequencies found in the control group may indicate that the physiological arousal may impact the speech production process by reducing the overt disfluencies.PMID:38593561 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2024.106425 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - April 9, 2024 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Veera Pirinen Kurt Eggers Katja Dindar Terhi Helminen Aija Kotila Sanna Kuusikko-Gauffin Leena M äkinen Hanna Ebeling Tuula Hurtig Mirjami M äntymaa Soile Loukusa Source Type: research

Associations between social anxiety, physiological reactivity, and speech disfluencies in autistic young adults and controls
CONCLUSIONS: SA or speaking-related physiological reactivity were not associated with disfluency frequencies or stuttering severity in autistic persons. Negative association between physiological reactivity and disfluency frequencies found in the control group may indicate that the physiological arousal may impact the speech production process by reducing the overt disfluencies.PMID:38593561 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2024.106425 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - April 9, 2024 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Veera Pirinen Kurt Eggers Katja Dindar Terhi Helminen Aija Kotila Sanna Kuusikko-Gauffin Leena M äkinen Hanna Ebeling Tuula Hurtig Mirjami M äntymaa Soile Loukusa Source Type: research

Associations between social anxiety, physiological reactivity, and speech disfluencies in autistic young adults and controls
CONCLUSIONS: SA or speaking-related physiological reactivity were not associated with disfluency frequencies or stuttering severity in autistic persons. Negative association between physiological reactivity and disfluency frequencies found in the control group may indicate that the physiological arousal may impact the speech production process by reducing the overt disfluencies.PMID:38593561 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2024.106425 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - April 9, 2024 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Veera Pirinen Kurt Eggers Katja Dindar Terhi Helminen Aija Kotila Sanna Kuusikko-Gauffin Leena M äkinen Hanna Ebeling Tuula Hurtig Mirjami M äntymaa Soile Loukusa Source Type: research

Associations between social anxiety, physiological reactivity, and speech disfluencies in autistic young adults and controls
CONCLUSIONS: SA or speaking-related physiological reactivity were not associated with disfluency frequencies or stuttering severity in autistic persons. Negative association between physiological reactivity and disfluency frequencies found in the control group may indicate that the physiological arousal may impact the speech production process by reducing the overt disfluencies.PMID:38593561 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2024.106425 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - April 9, 2024 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Veera Pirinen Kurt Eggers Katja Dindar Terhi Helminen Aija Kotila Sanna Kuusikko-Gauffin Leena M äkinen Hanna Ebeling Tuula Hurtig Mirjami M äntymaa Soile Loukusa Source Type: research

Associations between social anxiety, physiological reactivity, and speech disfluencies in autistic young adults and controls
CONCLUSIONS: SA or speaking-related physiological reactivity were not associated with disfluency frequencies or stuttering severity in autistic persons. Negative association between physiological reactivity and disfluency frequencies found in the control group may indicate that the physiological arousal may impact the speech production process by reducing the overt disfluencies.PMID:38593561 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2024.106425 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - April 9, 2024 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Veera Pirinen Kurt Eggers Katja Dindar Terhi Helminen Aija Kotila Sanna Kuusikko-Gauffin Leena M äkinen Hanna Ebeling Tuula Hurtig Mirjami M äntymaa Soile Loukusa Source Type: research

Associations between social anxiety, physiological reactivity, and speech disfluencies in autistic young adults and controls
CONCLUSIONS: SA or speaking-related physiological reactivity were not associated with disfluency frequencies or stuttering severity in autistic persons. Negative association between physiological reactivity and disfluency frequencies found in the control group may indicate that the physiological arousal may impact the speech production process by reducing the overt disfluencies.PMID:38593561 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2024.106425 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - April 9, 2024 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Veera Pirinen Kurt Eggers Katja Dindar Terhi Helminen Aija Kotila Sanna Kuusikko-Gauffin Leena M äkinen Hanna Ebeling Tuula Hurtig Mirjami M äntymaa Soile Loukusa Source Type: research

Associations between social anxiety, physiological reactivity, and speech disfluencies in autistic young adults and controls
CONCLUSIONS: SA or speaking-related physiological reactivity were not associated with disfluency frequencies or stuttering severity in autistic persons. Negative association between physiological reactivity and disfluency frequencies found in the control group may indicate that the physiological arousal may impact the speech production process by reducing the overt disfluencies.PMID:38593561 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2024.106425 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - April 9, 2024 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Veera Pirinen Kurt Eggers Katja Dindar Terhi Helminen Aija Kotila Sanna Kuusikko-Gauffin Leena M äkinen Hanna Ebeling Tuula Hurtig Mirjami M äntymaa Soile Loukusa Source Type: research

Associations between social anxiety, physiological reactivity, and speech disfluencies in autistic young adults and controls
CONCLUSIONS: SA or speaking-related physiological reactivity were not associated with disfluency frequencies or stuttering severity in autistic persons. Negative association between physiological reactivity and disfluency frequencies found in the control group may indicate that the physiological arousal may impact the speech production process by reducing the overt disfluencies.PMID:38593561 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2024.106425 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - April 9, 2024 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Veera Pirinen Kurt Eggers Katja Dindar Terhi Helminen Aija Kotila Sanna Kuusikko-Gauffin Leena M äkinen Hanna Ebeling Tuula Hurtig Mirjami M äntymaa Soile Loukusa Source Type: research

Narrative skills and language comprehension in preschool children with cochlear implants: A comparison with children with Developmental Language Disorder or typical development
CONCLUSIONS: The scarce differences between CI and DLD groups and the absence of an effect of morphosyntactic comprehension on pronoun production may be due to their low production of these elements in the narrative task and/or to a difficulty in managing pronouns in an expressive task regardless of their ability to comprehend them. Potential implications of these results are discussed.PMID:38579544 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2024.106424 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - April 5, 2024 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Marinella Majorano Valentina Persici Michela Santangelo Rachele Ferrari Beatrice Bertelli Elena Florit Manuela Lavelli Tamara Bastianello Letizia Guerzoni Domenico Cuda Source Type: research

Narrative skills and language comprehension in preschool children with cochlear implants: A comparison with children with Developmental Language Disorder or typical development
CONCLUSIONS: The scarce differences between CI and DLD groups and the absence of an effect of morphosyntactic comprehension on pronoun production may be due to their low production of these elements in the narrative task and/or to a difficulty in managing pronouns in an expressive task regardless of their ability to comprehend them. Potential implications of these results are discussed.PMID:38579544 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2024.106424 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - April 5, 2024 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Marinella Majorano Valentina Persici Michela Santangelo Rachele Ferrari Beatrice Bertelli Elena Florit Manuela Lavelli Tamara Bastianello Letizia Guerzoni Domenico Cuda Source Type: research

Narrative skills and language comprehension in preschool children with cochlear implants: A comparison with children with Developmental Language Disorder or typical development
CONCLUSIONS: The scarce differences between CI and DLD groups and the absence of an effect of morphosyntactic comprehension on pronoun production may be due to their low production of these elements in the narrative task and/or to a difficulty in managing pronouns in an expressive task regardless of their ability to comprehend them. Potential implications of these results are discussed.PMID:38579544 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2024.106424 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - April 5, 2024 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Marinella Majorano Valentina Persici Michela Santangelo Rachele Ferrari Beatrice Bertelli Elena Florit Manuela Lavelli Tamara Bastianello Letizia Guerzoni Domenico Cuda Source Type: research

Correspondence between consonant inventories obtained using modified naturalistic listening in real time (NLRT) and parent report
CONCLUSIONS: Although the mean number of consonants in inventory between coders and parents was slightly closer using the 10+ versus 2+ criterion for consonant inclusion, the difference was not significant enough to recommend one protocol over the other.PMID:38422565 | PMC:PMC10939712 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2024.106417 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - February 29, 2024 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Mary A Hardin-Jones Ann E Dahill Libby Heimbaugh Adriane Baylis Caitlin Cummings Kathy L Chapman Cleft Outcomes Research NETwork (CORNET) Consortium Source Type: research

Correspondence between consonant inventories obtained using modified naturalistic listening in real time (NLRT) and parent report
CONCLUSIONS: Although the mean number of consonants in inventory between coders and parents was slightly closer using the 10+ versus 2+ criterion for consonant inclusion, the difference was not significant enough to recommend one protocol over the other.PMID:38422565 | PMC:PMC10939712 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2024.106417 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - February 29, 2024 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Mary A Hardin-Jones Ann E Dahill Libby Heimbaugh Adriane Baylis Caitlin Cummings Kathy L Chapman Cleft Outcomes Research NETwork (CORNET) Consortium Source Type: research

Correspondence between consonant inventories obtained using modified naturalistic listening in real time (NLRT) and parent report
CONCLUSIONS: Although the mean number of consonants in inventory between coders and parents was slightly closer using the 10+ versus 2+ criterion for consonant inclusion, the difference was not significant enough to recommend one protocol over the other.PMID:38422565 | PMC:PMC10939712 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2024.106417 (Source: Journal of Communication Disorders)
Source: Journal of Communication Disorders - February 29, 2024 Category: Speech-Language Pathology Authors: Mary A Hardin-Jones Ann E Dahill Libby Heimbaugh Adriane Baylis Caitlin Cummings Kathy L Chapman Cleft Outcomes Research NETwork (CORNET) Consortium Source Type: research