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Brain activity in adults who stutter: similarities across speaking tasks and correlations with stuttering frequency and speaking rate
Authors:Ingham Roger J  Grafton Scott T  Bothe Anne K  Ingham Janis C
Affiliation:a Department of Speech and Hearing Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, United States
b Department of Psychology, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, United States
c Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, United States
Abstract:Many differences in brain activity have been reported between persons who stutter (PWS) and typically fluent controls during oral reading tasks. An earlier meta-analysis of imaging studies identified stutter-related regions, but recent studies report less agreement with those regions. A PET study on adult dextral PWS (= 18) and matched fluent controls (CONT, = 12) is reported that used both oral reading and monologue tasks. After correcting for speech rate differences between the groups the task-activation differences were surprisingly small. For both analyses only some regions previously considered stutter-related were more activated in the PWS group than in the CONT group, and these were also activated during eyes-closed rest (ECR). In the PWS group, stuttering frequency was correlated with cortico-striatal-thalamic circuit activity in both speaking tasks. The neuroimaging findings for the PWS group, relative to the CONT group, appear consistent with neuroanatomic abnormalities being increasingly reported among PWS.
Keywords:Stuttering   Oral reading   Monologue   Brain imaging   PET
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