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Etiology Theories –1. Organic, Constitutional, or Medical –2. Neurotic –3. Behavioral or Learned
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. Organic, Constitutional, or Medical Theories –1. Cerebral Dominance –2. Biochemical –2. Laryngeal Dynamics –3. Heredity –4. Middle Ear Dysfunction –5. Neurological Functioning
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1. Theory of Cerebral Dominance Theories: Orton and Travis Fact: more stutterers are left handed Supporting Research –Moscovitch (1973) asserts that the right hemisphere in right- handed people maintains some limited underlying ‘verbal competence’ –Geschwind limit of this verbal competence ‘depends on the degree to which the dominant hemisphere can control the verbal behavior of the minor hemisphere via midline commissures and other pathways” Tenant: –defective ‘motor lead control’ or incomplete cerebral dominance remediation: change handedness
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2. Laryngeal Dynamics’ Theory Theorist: Adams Stutterers have longer VOT, SIT (speech initiation times) VIT (voice initiation times) describes characteristics –does not identify causal components of disorder,
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3. Biochemical Theorist: West Compared to a mild form of epilepsy term: dsyphemia Current Research: Dopamine Questions? Cause or effect
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6. Middle Ear Dysfunction Theorist: Webster Non-synchronized middle ear muscle firing which means there are non-synchronized messages to the brain
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4. Heredity Model Theory Theorists: Kidd, Goldberg, Wepman Facts: stuttering runs in families, 8-15% –65-70% had stuttering relatives –twinning studies more stuttering in monozygotic twins, risk 77% Stuttering is determined by many factors, the factors are both hereditary and environmental and it affects the sexes differently –related to a THRESHOLD MODEL
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5. Neurological Functioning Theorist: Perkins use of Positron Emission Tomography (PET) scans there is a neurophysical difference at the moment of stuttering Current research: role of Prefrontal Cortex Function: Question: cause or effect?
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III. Learning Theories 1. Diagnosogenic 2. Two-Factor 3. Approach-Avoidance 4 Capacities/Demands 5. Anticipatory/Struggle
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1. Diagnosogenic Theory Wendell Johnson, 1940’s Tenants: –a diagnosogenic disorder is one that is caused by its diagnosis person’s behavior is labeled as ______ and _____ –dysfluency in the ‘ear of the beholder’ –listener (PARENT) reinforced s=through negative reinforcement which parent believes in punishment
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Diagnosogenic Theory continued 3 Behaviors that must occur –1. Child repeats or hesitates while speaking frequency is not a critical variable –2.listener ‘diagnoses’ repetitions as abnormal and react accordingly “stop and start over thinking for what you are saying before you say it take a deep breath before you start talk more slowly non-verbal response such as looking away –3. Child becomes concerned and tries not to be dysfluent attends more to the dysfluencies than previosly and becomes upset when they occur
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2. Two Factor Theory Theorist: Brutten and Shoemaker Stuttering results from the interaction of genetic and environmental factors Factor I behaviors result from emotional learning –classically conditioned –modified either though reconditioning or counterconditioning –reconditioning involved returning a conditioned stimulus to its previous neutral status repeated presentations of the conditioned stimulus without negative consequences ex: salesperson
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Factor I Classical Conditioning Cont. –counterconditioning-learning new responses to a conditioned stimulus repeated presentation of the conditioned stimulus in various negative emotion producing situations in a hierarchy
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Two Factor Theory: Factor II Factor II behaviors learned through operant conditioning –instrumental responses operantly conditioned over the years –developed in an attempt to prevent or reduce the severity of stuttering –secondary behaviors –reduced through reinforcement, nonreinforcement or punishment reinforcement of fluency enhancing behaviors results in elimination
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3. Approach-Avoidance Theory Sheehan Tenant –conflict arises in which the motivational drives subserving both approach and avoidance are simultaneously aroused –when the APPROACH drive is dominant, fluent speech –when there is Avoidance BUT the speaker speaks, then….. –Origins in learned speech anxieties and/or unconscious personally factors
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4. Capacities/Demands Theory Starkweather Tenants –capacities for fluent speech-motoric,cognitive, linguistic skills that make speech easy for most children-interact with demands for fluency placed on child by the external communicative environment and by child himself as capacity for fluency grows, expectations of parent and child also increase capacities and demands are increasing as a function of age
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5. Anticipatory Struggle Hypothesis Bloodstein Tenants: disorder maintained by anticipating stuttering and then struggling to avoid it
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III Neurotic Theory 1. Glauber 2. Bloom 3. Frustration Theory
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Neurotic Theory Concepts Stuttering as a type of neurosis stutter because they attempt to cope with some type of repressed (unconscious) neurotic need in a way that allows them to be dysfluent hypotheses look upon stuttering as being both a symptom of an unsatisfied repressed emotional need AND purposeful behavior
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1. Neurotic Theory: Glauber Stuttering behaviors -symbolic of the repressed need Repressed need for: – infantile need for oral erotic gratification –infantile need for anal erotic gratification stuttering represents anal movements “displaced upwards”
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2. Neurotic Theory: Bloom Aggressive expression of hostile feelings person is afraid to express openly –stutterer makes those with whom he/she speaks uncomfortable assumes stuttering is ‘painful’ for the listener
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Neurotic Theory Thoughts For many stutterers, stuttering is non- symptomatic –does not cluster with other problems Neither stutterers or their parents show no greater evidence of neurotic symptoms than the population
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Etiology Questions What is Peters and Guitars’ theory of causality What is yours? Which one/s have you discounted What is “the point” of so many causation theories?
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End of Lecture Notes The door is open to …..
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