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Levelt's perceptual loop theory as an account of speech production that relies on perceptual processes. Diagram showsLHS conceptualizer, formulator, articulationRHS audition, speech comprehensionNoteSpeech comprehension is the speech perception systemThe flow of information between the processe
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1. PSYC 2207 (Speech) Lecture 3 (part one) Orienting Question
2. Levelt’s perceptual loop theory as an account of speech production that relies on perceptual processes Diagram shows
LHS conceptualizer, formulator, articulation
RHS audition, speech comprehension
Note
Speech comprehension is the speech perception system
The flow of information between the processes
The conceptualizer has a monitor that receives input from the conceptualizer and the speech comprehension system
8. Problems for the monitoring account The relationship between speech errors and repairs
speakers make errors that they do not repair
these errors seem to have different characteristics to those that are repaired (seem to depend on different processes)
errors are not always repaired (young children)
Conclusion: errors that are repaired are not representative of those that arise in production and repairing seems to be an optional process
9. Problems for the monitoring account Can speakers recover details about the sound of their voice from the sound that is output?
Bone conducted sound
is not like speech
is as loud as direct speech
10. PSYC 2207 (Speech) Lecture 3 (part two) Orienting Question
11. Classic description of stuttering and similarities between early childhood nonfluencies and stuttering What is stuttering?
Episodes of fluency interspersed with dysfluencies
Based on assessment of speech
Stuttering event counts are made
13. Who suffers from stuttering? Occurs in all cultures
Estimate of incidence - about 10% some time in life
Demographics
mainly males
disorder of childhood (about 90% recover spontaneously
middle class children seem particularly prone
14. Stuttering Very intransigent to recovery if not recovered by teens
Characteristics change developmentally - does change that happens lead to persistence?
Stuttering events occur in all fluent speakers
Not really errors - we call them fluency failures
An intermittent problem - even in very severe stutterers
NB although intermittent not random - linguistic factors
15. Johnson’s categories divided into stalling and advancing - STALLING
16. Johnson’s categories divided into stalling and advancing - ADVANCING
17. Health service issues Diagnosis
is this being done correctly?
If not, maybe children who are not really stuttering (NNF) are being treated
18. Health service issues Treatment outcome
How can outcome be measured in children in the face of such a high rate of spontaneous recovery
19. Where does stuttering occur in speech? Brown’s adult factors (and differences in children)
Adults stutter on content words, children on function words
Adults stutter on consonants, children on vowels
Problems occur in early positions in sentences
Problems experienced on long words
21. What do we know about how stuttering changes over development? Brown’s adult factors (and differences in children)
Adults stutter on content words, children on function words
Dysfluency type changes as children persist
Conture
change from repetitions to prolongations
Yairi
change from word to part-word repetitions