SMPFD 3

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Date and location of conference: Nijmegen, June 5-8, 1996
Editors of proceedings: Wouter Hulstijn, Herman F.M.Peters and Pascal H.H.M. Van Lieshout
Date of publication: May 1997
Proceedings available from: Elsevier Science Publishers

[edit] Contact Information

Elsevier Science Publishers
P.O. Box 211
1000 AE Amsterdam
The Netherlands

Phone: (+31) 20 485 3757
Fax: (+31) 20 485 3432
E-mail: nlinfo-f@elsevier.nl

[edit] Table of Contents

MODELS IN SPEECH PRODUCTION

  1. Speech motor models and developments in neurophysiological science: new perspectives: Raymond D. Kent
  2. A neuromotor perspective on speech production: Vincent L. Gracco
  3. The gestural phonology model: Louis Goldstein
  4. Towards a theory of phonetic encoding in language production: Antje S. Meyer

NEUROPHYSIOLOGY AND BRAIN IMAGING IN SPEECH PRODUCTION

  1. Brain imaging in speech production: choices and challenges: Judith L. Lauter
  2. Mapping and modelling human cognition: Peter T. Fox
  3. PET research in speech and language production: Peter Indefrey
  4. Speech and language research from multiple perspectives: electrical brain stimulation, electrical recording, and acute structural lesions: Barry Gordon
  5. The neurophysiology of speaking: possibilities of event-related potential research on speech production: Peter Hagoort

BRAIN IMAGING RESEARCH IN STUTTERING

  1. Principles of human brain organization related to lateralization of language and speech motor functions in normal speakers and stutterers: William G. Webster
  2. H2150 positron emission tomography studies in developmental stuttering: comparisons of brain activity during non-linguistic orolaryngeal motor activity, fluency- and dysfluency-evoking language conditions: A.R. Braun, et al.
  3. An O15 positron emission tomography (PET) study on adult stutterers: findings and implications: Roger J. Ingham, Peter T. Fox and Janis Costello Ingham
  4. A positron emission tomography investigation of post-treatment brain activation in stutterers: Robert Kroll, L. De Nil, S. Kapur and S. Houle
  5. PET scan evidence of parallel cerebral systems related to treatment effects: Glyndon Riley and Joseph C. Wu
  6. Neurophysiologic and behavioral evidence for a fluency-generating system: Ben C. Watson and Frances J. Freeman
  7. Topographic EEG mapping of stuttering subjects during speech and non-speech tasks under normal and altered feedback conditions: Michael P. Raststatter, Joseph Kalinowski, Jerry Crawford and Andrew Stuart
  8. Prosodic disturbances in stuttering adults: Lutz Jaencke, Anne Bauer and Karl Theodor Kalvaram

MOTOR CONTROL IN DYSFLUENT SPEECH

  1. Functional Components of the Motor System: An Approach to Understanding the Mechanisms of Speech Disfluency: Michael D. McClean
  2. Stuttering and misguided learning of articulation, or why it is extremely difficult to estimate the physical parameters of limbs: Karl Theodor Kalveram
  3. A multi-leveled, dynamic approach to stuttering: Anne Smith
  4. Spatial and temporal variability in obstruent gestural specification by stutterers and controls: comparisons across sessions: Peter J. Alfonso and Pascal H.H.M. Van Lieshout
  5. Higher and lower order influences on the stability of: dynamic coupling between articulators: Pascal H.H.M. Van Lieshout, Wouter Hulstijn, Peter J. Alfonso and Herman F.M. Peters
  6. Applications of motor learning theory to stuttering research: Anthony J. Caruso, Ludo Max and M. Troy McClowry
  7. Speech Production Learning in Adults with Chronic Developmental Stuttering: Christy L. Ludlow, Kathleen Siren and Mary Zikria
  8. Gesture Mirrors Speech Motor Control in Stutterers: Rachel Mayberry and Rosaly Shenker
  9. Mechanical perturbation of the jaw during speech in stutterers and nonstutterers: Anne Bauer, Lutz Jaencke and Karl Theodor Kalvaram
  10. Analysis of multi-peaked velocity curve profiles in the fluent speech of stutterers and nonstutterers: Claudio Zmarich and Emanuela M. Caldognetto
  11. Stuttering and articulator sequencing: intrinsic and: extrinsic timing perspectives: David Ward
  12. A comparison of normals' and aphasics' ability to plan respiratory activity in overt and covert speech: Philip Hoole and Wolfram Ziegler

ACOUSTIC RESEARCH IN SPEECH PRODUCTION

  1. Laryngeal adjustments in stutterers and normal speakers: Georg Wieneke and Peggy Janssen
  2. Part-word repetition of words beginning with English stops - (1) influence of target VOT on point of termination: N.S. Viswanath, D. Rosenfield and A. Joullian
  3. Part-word repetition of words beginning with English stops - (2) acoustic dynamics before point of termination: N.S. Viswanath and D. Rosenfield
  4. Speech timing and coarticulation in stuttering, dysarthria and apraxia of speech: perceptual data: Anthony J. Caruso, et al.
  5. Linguistic Stress and the rhythm effect in stuttering: Ann Packman, Mark Onslow and Janis Van Doorn
  6. Effect of instruction to sing on stuttering frequency at normal and fast rates: Helen Glover, Joseph Kalinowski, Andrew Stuart and Michael Rastatter

MEDICATION AND BRAIN RESEARCH

  1. A double-blind trial of pimozide and paroxetine for stuttering: Sheila Stager, et al.
  2. Effects of risperidone, a dopamine receptor antagonist, in the treatment of stuttering and its theoretical implications: Gerald Maguire
  3. Event-related cortical potentials preceding phonation in stutterers and normal speakers: a preliminary report: Lawrence F. Molt

METHODS AND MEASUREMENTS IN PATHOLOGICAL SPEECH

  1. Automatic stuttering frequency counts: Peter Howell, Stevie Sackin, Kazan Glenn and James Au-Yeung
  2. The concept of subperceptual stuttering: analysis and investigation: Anne K. Cordes and Roger Ingham
  3. The measurement of voice onset abruptness via acoustic, accelerometric, and aerodynamic signal analysis: Klaas Bakker, Roger Ingham and Ron Netsell
  4. Verbal delayed reactions: a useful tool to detect prefrontal function impairments: P. Pinelli, et al.
  5. Improving assessment of children's oral motor development in clinical settings: J. Scott Yaruss
  6. Demonstration software for making automatic stuttering frequency counts: Peter Howell, Stevie Sackin, Kazan Glenn and James Au-Yeung
  7. Stuttering and communicative suitability of speech: Marie-Christine Franken
  8. The effects of formal and casual interview styles on stuttering: Peter Howell, Anuparma Kapoor and Lena Rustin
  9. The electroglottographic signal as a device for stuttering evaluation: Ulrich Natke, Karl Theodor Kalvaram and Lutz Jaencke
  10. The simultaneous analysis of lip, jaw and tongue movements with an integrated optical tracking and epg system: Emanuela Magno Caldognetto, et al.
  11. Functionality indexes for the evaluation of speech production: A study in normal subjects: R. Colombo, et al.
  12. Chronometry of the brain processes during speech production: a quantitative test to monitor exposition to neurotoxic solvents: G. Spinatonda, et al.
  13. Towards a Nijmegen speech motor test: Herman F.M. Peters, Pascal P.H.H. Van Lieshout, Annette Bakker, and Wouter Hulstijn

DEVELOPMENTAL ASPECTS OF SPEECH PRODUCTION

  1. Cognitive and linguistic abilities of stuttering children: Andrea Haege, Dieter Rommel, Helga S. Johanssen and Hartmut Schulze
  2. Linguistic and paralinguistic aspects of stuttering in childhood: Dieter Rommel, Andrea Haege, Helga S. Johanssen and Hartmut Schulze
  3. Determinants of fluency in fast and slow speaking normally fluent children: Frank R. Boutsen, Stephen B. Hood, Caren A. McCoy and Cheryl A. Pfefferle
  4. Stuttering as an automatisation deficit: Peter Howell, James Au-Yeung, Jessica Beard and Lena Rustin
  5. Visuomotor tracking ability of children who stutter: a preliminary study: Patricia M. Zebrowski and Jerald B. Moon
  6. The role of laterality in the clinical state of stuttering: Rosana Brakus, S. Golubovic, V. Brakus and N. Duzdevic
  7. Clinical application of speech science instrumentation in the determination of treatment priorities in acquired and congenital childhood dysarthria: B.E. Murdoch, S. Horton, D. Theodorus and E.C. Thompson
  8. Phonological encoding: acoustic evidence for the syllable as a motoric planning unit: Inge Boers, Ben Maassen and Sjoeke van der Meulen

DEVELOPMENTAL ASPECTS IN SPEECH MOTOR PRODUCTION

  1. Neuronal group selection and emergent orofacial motor control: towards a unifying theory of speech development: Steven M. Barlow
  2. Speaking rate and speech motor control: theoretical considerations and empirical data: Ehud Yairi and Kelly Hall
  3. Quantitative assessment of dysarthria and developmental apraxia of speech: Ben Maassen, Geert Thoonen and Inge Boers
  4. Stuttering and phonological encoding in childhood: Herman Kolk and Edward G. Conture

LINGUISTIC PROCESSING IN SPEECH PRODUCTION

  1. Relating stuttering onset to children's linguistic development: Nan Bernstein Ratner
  2. On the mechanisms of speech monitoring: Albert Postma
  3. Interference between cognitive and motor processes during speech production: Hans-Georg Bosshardt
  4. Lexicalization processes in adults who stutter: David Prins, Victoria Main and Susan Waupler
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