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The association between stuttering, Brown's factors, and phonological categories in child stutterers ranging in age between 2 and 12 years

Authors :
Peter Howell
James Au-Yeung
Source :
Journal of Fluency Disorders. 20:331-344
Publication Year :
1995
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 1995.

Abstract

Though the phonological difficulty of a word might reasonably be supposed to influence whether a word is stuttered, it has recently been reported that the incidence of stuttering does not depend on this factor in child stutterers. This conclusion is reexamined in the current report. Data are employed that were obtained from groups of child stutterers (and their controls) who vary in age and severity of their disorder. First, it is shown that the measure of phonological difficulty reveals differences in phonological ability for children of different ages (stutterers and fluent controls). The properties of words with regard to whether they are function words or content words, their position in the sentence, their length, and the phoneme that they start with vary between phonological categories (referred to as “Brown's factors”). Since these factors could influence whether words are stuttered in their own right, they may led to apparent differences in stuttering between words in different phonological categories that are spurious. Alternatively, these factors may disguise influences that phonological categories have on stuttering. It is shown in the next analysis that the words in the various phonological categories differ with regard to Brown's factors. In the final analysis, the proportion of words stuttered for words in each phonological category are analyzed so that any influence Brown's factors might have are removed by treating the factors as covariates. No dependence of stuttering on phonological category is observed for age group, stutterer's severity, or word types (stuttered word or word following the stuttered word). Thus, phonological difficulty as measured here and elsewhere does not appear to be a major factor governing the incidence of stuttering in children.

Details

ISSN :
0094730X
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Fluency Disorders
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8fe750691c28edfddff4765093a0b1fc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/0094-730x(94)00016-m