2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcomdis.2012.02.002
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The effects of duration and frequency of occurrence of voiceless fricatives on listeners’ perceptions of sound prolongations

Abstract: After reading this article, the reader will be able to: (1) Describe the past literature on listener perceptions of stuttering. (2) Differentiate between listener's perceptions of sound prolongations that are altered in duration and frequency of occurrence. (3) Describe how paragraph-length speech material compares to past research that has used isolated utterances.

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…The speech disfluency can be characterised by normal disfluency which has minimum risk whereas stuttering has high risk. The normal disfluency has phrase repetitions, interjections like "um" and "uh", broken words between the word pause or silence whereas stuttering has repetitions of syllable or words or multi-syllabic whole word repetitions, a dysrhythmic phonation or prolongations of sounds and silent blockages of speech [5] [18]. The vocal tone is one of the features used to analyse the stuttering based on the occurrence of syllable or word repetition since it has the basic unit and contains more temporal information than the phoneme.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The speech disfluency can be characterised by normal disfluency which has minimum risk whereas stuttering has high risk. The normal disfluency has phrase repetitions, interjections like "um" and "uh", broken words between the word pause or silence whereas stuttering has repetitions of syllable or words or multi-syllabic whole word repetitions, a dysrhythmic phonation or prolongations of sounds and silent blockages of speech [5] [18]. The vocal tone is one of the features used to analyse the stuttering based on the occurrence of syllable or word repetition since it has the basic unit and contains more temporal information than the phoneme.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%