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Motor Performance of Stutterers and Nonstutterers on Timing and Force Control Tasks
Authors:Howard N. Zelaznik  Anne Smith  Elizabeth A. Franz
Affiliation:1. Department of Health, Kinesiology, and Leisure Studies , Purdue University , USA;2. Department of Audiology and Speech Science , Purdue University , USA;3. Department of Psychology , University of California , Berkeley, USA
Abstract:Recently it has been suggested that speech and manual timing tasks share a common central process (Franz, Zelaznik, & Smith, 1992). Because stuttering is thought to be related to deficits in motoric processes such as timing, stutterers (n = 15) were compared with a set of age-, education-, and sex-matched nonstutterers on timing and isometric force-production tasks. In the timing tasks, subjects flexed and extended the right index finger at the metacarpophalangeal joint at cycle durations of 600, 500, 400, 300, and 200 ms. In the force-production tasks, subjects generated isometric forces to match target force levels displayed on a cathode-ray tube (CRT) screen. There were five levels of force, ranging from .11 to 7.85 newtons. Overall, there were no differences in timing and force-production performance between stutterers and nonstutterers. These results are similar to those obtained recently by Hulstijn, Summers, van Lieshout, and Peters (1992). We suggest that stuttering is not characterized by a general deficit in rhythmic timing. Instead, the motor deficit associated with stuttering should be viewed as speech specific.
Keywords:force control  motor control  speech  stuttering  timing
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