Fluency enhancing conditions - Western Michigan University
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Transcript Fluency enhancing conditions - Western Michigan University
Assessment of Fluency Disorders
Stephen Tasko
Speech Pathology and Audiology
Western Michigan University
What is a fluency disorder?
Stuttering
Developmental stuttering
Psychogenic stuttering
Neurogenic stuttering
Cluttering
(Developmental) Stuttering
Common Features
Breakdown in the fluidity and rhythm of speech
Breakdowns include
Sound repetition
Audible and silent prolongations
Typically occurs at the beginning of utterances
May fluctuate a great deal across situations
Stuttering influenced by environmental, linguistic and other communicative
pressures
May delay (postpone) or avoid saying certain words/sounds etc
Can have associated symptoms including overt body movements such as
facial twitches, grimaces, head jerking, extraneous limb movement etc
(secondary behaviors)
Can have associated symptoms of anxiety, shame, fear and guilt
(Developmental) Stuttering
Natural History of disorder
Begins in early childhood (preschool)
Early stuttering may be difficult to distinguish from
normal disfluency
Features of stuttering tend to change over time
Spontaneous resolution is not uncommon
Prevalence: roughly 1% of population
Lifetime incidence: ~ 4-5 %
In developed form, expectancy, fear and avoidance
play significant roles
(Developmental) Stuttering
Who tends to stutter?
Those with a family history of the disorder
Slower developing/disordered speech and
language
Boys more likely to stutter than girls
Children who are “vulnerable” to stress*
Neurogenic Stuttering
Neuropathology
Distinct from aphasia,
dysarthria, apraxia
Observed following lesions
to
Left and right hemisphere
All lobes except occipital
lobe
Cortical and subcortical
(BG; thalamus) structures
Some Features
Part-word or phoneme
repetitions
No patterns related to word
type
Not restricted to initial
words
No syllable stress effect
Lack of anxiety or
secondary symptoms
Less responsive to fluencyenhancing conditions
Psychogenic Stuttering
Stuttering secondary to emotional trauma or
stress
Some Features
Sudden onset, typically related to some event
Repetition of initial or stressed word
Fluency enhancing effects not observed
No periods of stutter free speech
Initially no interest in problem
Cluttering
Daly, 1992
“Cluttering is a disorder of speech and language
processing resulting in rapid, dysrhythmic,
sporadic, unorganized, and frequently
unintelligible speech. Accelerated speech is not
always present, but an impairment in formulating
language almost always is.”
Ten Significant Features of Cluttering:
Expert Opinion (Daly & Cantrell, 2006)
Characteristic
Telescopes or condenses words
Lack of effective self-monitoring skills
Lack of pauses between words; run-on sentences
Lack of awareness
Imprecise articulation
Irregular speech rate
Interjections; revisions; filler words
Compulsive talker; verbose; circumlocutions
Language disorganized; confused wording
Seems to verbalize before adequate thought formulation
Agreement (%)
93
90
83
83
82
82
80
80
78
75
Stuttering vs. Cluttering
Pure cluttering considered relatively rare
Is it rare or do pure clutterers not seek treatment?
Cluttering-stuttering more common
Clinical reports of about 1/3 of youngsters who
stutter show signs of cluttering
The Assessment Process
Case History
Evaluating Attitudes Toward Problem
Evaluating Stuttering Behavior
Diagnostic Probes
Summarizing and Making Recommendations
General Considerations
Build rapport
Age
Audiotape session (videotape if possible)
Case History
Problem Description
General
What is the problem?
Why is this a problem
Specific
Conditions when worse/better
How do you get out of a stutter?
How do you prevent a stutter?
How do others react to your stuttering?
How do you react to your stuttering and others reactions
to it?
Can you predict or anticipate your stuttering?
Problem Description continued
History
When did it start?
Who identified it?
Why do you think it started?
Summarize the history of the stuttering.
Problem Description continued
Family history of stuttering
Medical history
Pregnancy
Family constellation
Developmental information
Speech and language
Intellectual
Physical
Emotional
Problem Description continued
Attitudes Toward the Problem
Has your reaction to stuttering changed?
Perceptions of others reactions and how you would
prefer them to react
Situational avoidance (speaking and nonspeaking)
Do you feel like you have control over your speech
or does it control you?
The measurement of attitudes and attitude change
are essential parts of successful treatment!!
Attitude Scales
A-19 Scale for children who stutter
Revised Erickson scale
Original items drawn from MMPI
24 T-F items with normative data
Perceptions of Stuttering Inventory (PSI)
19 Y-N questions
60 questions
3 themes, struggle, avoidance, expectancy
Children’s attitude test
35 T-F questions
Older children can self administer, younger children can be asked
questions
Additional Information
Self rating of problem
Overall
How representative is speech today?
Therapy history and attitudes toward therapy
Therapy history
Expectations of therapy
Evaluating stuttering behavior
Counting and sorting disfluencies
Physical descriptions of disfluency
Stuttering instruments
Noting associated behaviors
Counting and Sorting Disfluency
Types of disfluency
Sound, syllable, word or phrase repetition
Sound, syllable, word or phrase revision
Prolongation
Tense Pause (Block)
Interjection
Revisions
Circumlocution
Counting disfluencies
% stuttered syllables/% stuttered words
Units vs. moments of disfluency
Physical description of disfluency
How does the speech pattern change prior to
breakdown?
What is happening at the moment of
breakdown?
How does the client release from the
breakdown?
Physical description of disfluency
Physiologic variables to consider
Voicing
Muscle Tension
Movement (stoppage, choppiness)
Rate of Speech
Airflow/Aerodynamics
With additional consideration given to
Effort, caution, tentative vs. free
Do behaviors serve a purpose?
For example,
Postponement
Avoidance
Starter behaviors
Escape behaviors
Early disfluency vs. stuttering
Common observations in young children
Whole-word repetition
Sentence initiation
Normal tempo
Lack of awareness or concern
Evidence of language formulation stress
Episodic
Summary by Yairi (1997)
Relative to normally fluent children, children who stutter exhibit
2-3x total disfluencies
5-6x stuttering-like disfluencies (SLD)*
↑ proportion of SLD/total disfluency
↑ proportion of part-word repetitions with ≥ 2 units
6x disfluency ‘clusters’
Longer disfluency clusters
Repetitions with shorter successive interval between units
2x associated head and neck movements
*SLD= part-word repetition, disrhythmic phonation, tense pause
Things to look for in youngsters
During Speech
Frequency of disfluency
Type of disfluency
Evidence of struggle
Rhythm of stuttering
More adult patterns
Associated behaviors
Awareness, fear and
frustration
Other risk factors
Gender
Family history
Concomitant speech/language
issues
Duration
Positive family history
Speech language status
male
>14-18 mos.
Age of onset
Onset after 3.5 yrs
Speech Samples
Reading aloud
Picture Description
Monologue: Job Description
“Problem” areas (e.g. telephone)
Variables known to influence fluency
Automatic speech
Choral speaking
Use difficult material
Altered speech rate
Use difficult material
Whispered speech
Counting
Say it fast/slow
Applying stress to client
Associated Behaviors
Selected Test Instruments
Stuttering Severity Instrument (SSI-3)
Overall Assessment of the Speaker’s
Experience of Stuttering (OASES)
Provile of Stuttering Behavior
Stuttering Severity Instrument: SSI-3
(Riley, 1994)
Provides a percentile rank and “severity”
rating based on a composite of scores based
upon
Frequency of disfluency
Duration of disfluency
Presence of physical concomitants
Measurements based on
Spontaneous speech and reading when literate
Picture description if not literate
Overall Assessment of the Speaker’s
Experience of Stuttering (OASES)
New Instrument (Yaruss and Quesel, 2006)
Multi-faceted assessment tool
Based on WHO definitions of health &
disability
Designed for adults
Relatively quick to administer (~20 minutes)
Undergone validation with normative data
Overall Assessment of the Speaker’s
Experience of Stuttering (OASES)
Four content areas
Section I: General Information
Section II: Your Reactions to Stuttering
Assesses the client’s situational difficulties (work, social, home)
Section IV: Quality of Life
Assesses the affective, behavioral, and cognitive reactions to stuttering
Section III: Communication in Daily Situations
Assesses self-perception of impairment, fluency, speech naturalness
Assesses knowledge about self-help and treatment options.
Assesses the negative impact of stuttering on the client’s life.
100 questions
Yield 4 focused scales, plus an overall scale
Profile of Stuttering Behavior (Van Riper)
Developed to measure
Frequency
Intensity
Duration
Postponement/avoidance
Provides a profile that is well suited for
evaluating therapy progress
Diagnostic Probes
Summarizing and Making
Recommendations