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Me too! However, I think that the only way for this to happen, as I understand it, is if we (the people who stutter in the stuttering community) propose these (or similar) extracted tips to researchers. This way, researchers and speech therapists can team up to create a new strategy based on recent research finding. As I understand it, if we, as the stuttering community, don't take the lead in reaching out to researchers. Then I think it's very likely that researchers will simply continue focusing on irrelevant details, and thus, completely overlook interventions regarding the core primal deficits in developmental stuttering. And of course, this problem is especially noticeable because it seems that fluency-shaping & stuttering-modification strategies used by traditional speech therapists, might be incompatible with such research findings, in the sense of, there is a dichotomy between easy stuttering (controlled fluency) **VS** subconscious fluency (stuttering remission). I find that speech therapists often prioritize interventions for easy stuttering, symptom reduction and other aspects that may conflict with research findings. We really need to initiate action ourselves, we should take initiative now!