The Effects of Stuttering

1031 Words3 Pages

The Effects of Stuttering
Throughout the modern era stuttering has caused many individuals to reshape the way they act or think. For people affected by stuttering, alterations are real and hard to overcome. Much of the world is based on first impressions; the way one acts and converses is an essential building block in relationships, and it helps one to establish an identity for themselves and others to perceive. With stuttering comes several downturns that affect the mind, body, and the way one is perceived. Researchers have noted many effects of stuttering besides those that are physical, and by understanding the causes of stuttering, researchers may find a cure for these individuals.
Causes
Researchers have tried to understand what exactly causes stuttering and where it originates. After much research, the answers are still an enigma. Stuttering has been known for centuries and occurs in all cultures (Packman, 2002). Stuttering has been the subject of many physical and mental outcomes for many decades. Researchers have seen people with PDS (persistent developmental stuttering) have a decrease in white matter in the rolandic operculum, thus there is a good hunch that stuttering could be based on an anatomical basis (Packman, 2002).
Researchers have found that stuttering is characterized as a speech disorder, and is definitely prominent in emotional aspect and syntactical aspect of demanding speech (Packman, 2002). This negates the theory that stuttering is merely bad timing as proposed by William H. Perkins. There is no significant data that shows that one thinks just as fast as one speaks, also there is no comparison as to what a “thought” actually is (Rosenfield, 2002).
Stuttering seems to take root in children m...

... middle of paper ...

... in the Treatment of Adults and Adolescents Who Stutter. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 21(3), 264-277. doi: 10.1044/1058-0360(2012/11-0068)
Packman, A, Onslow, M (2002). Searching for the cause of stuttering. LANCET 360 (9334): 655-656.
Rosenfield, D. B., & Viswanath, N. S. (2002). Neuroscience of Stuttering. Science, 295(5557), 973-974.
Saltuklaroglu, T., & Kalinowski, J. (2005). How effective is therapy for childhood stuttering? Dissecting and reinterpreting the evidence in light of spontaneous recovery rates. International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 40(3), 359-374. doi:10.1080/13682820400027735
Van Borsel, J., Brepoels, M., & De Coene, J. (2011). Stuttering, attractiveness and romantic relationships: The perception of adolescents and young adults. Journal of Fluency Disorder, 36(1), 41-50. doi: 10.1016/j.jfludis.2011.01.002

Open Document