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commentr/StutterOct 19, 2020
1 points

What's that science and can you show how it connects to stuttering?...

Causes & VariabilityCommunity & Support
Neurological & BrainResearch & Resources
commentr/StutterOct 18, 2020
2 points

I am an ex stutterer. Following a car accident, wherein I received a TBI, I also eventually found that I no longer stutter The best explanation I can come up with is as follows: I used to subconsciou...

Causes & VariabilitySpeech & Stuttering
Neurological & BrainPhysical Tension
commentr/StutterOct 18, 2020
8 points

I’ve been stuttering for almost 13 years, while it’s common in childhood, stuttering into adulthood is almost always permanent from what I’ve been able to research a few years back. Confidence doesn’t...

Causes & VariabilityCoping & Advocacy
Genetic & Family FactorsNeurological & BrainTrauma & Psychological+2 more
commentr/StutterOct 17, 2020
3 points

Stuttering is weird for me too. I only stutter after a period of stress or lack of sleep or both. It can start in the middle of talking to someone and it can take ten minutes for it to go away or some...

Causes & Variability
Cycles & RandomnessNeurological & Brain
commentr/StutterOct 17, 2020
1 points

As I'm not from the US I don't know what a SLP is or does, but a psychiatrist deals with your psychological and not your speech problems....

Causes & Variability
Neurological & BrainCycles & Randomness
commentr/StutterOct 16, 2020
3 points

Ya it's weird. My best guess is has something to do with neural pathways being glitched or laid with feedback loops. So as you learned other languages those pathways dont have the same error. But thi...

Causes & Variability
Neurological & Brain
commentr/StutterOct 16, 2020
3 points

Sometimes I think that stuttering is actually a neural pathway optimization issue, because at some point I was fluent for a week after I had my dental braces removed. Something about novelty and mappi...

Causes & Variability
Neurological & Brain
commentr/StutterOct 15, 2020
1 points

What exactly do you mean, and how does it relate to stutter?...

Causes & Variability
Neurological & Brain
commentr/StutterOct 13, 2020
1 points

I also heard that a girl in my town had a problem with stuttering but after she had an accident she had no problem with, is really weird because Stuttering also occurs for muscle or brain disorder, sh...

Causes & Variability
Neurological & BrainTrauma & Psychological
commentr/StutterOct 13, 2020
2 points

Sudden or new onset of stuttering in adults (or even adolescents) can be a sign of something neurological, so things like tumors or other things affecting the health of your brain. I would not take th...

Causes & Variability
Neurological & Brain
commentr/StutterOct 13, 2020
2 points

I had chronic neuroinflammation, including up around C1 (the part of the neck that joins the skull) for years, I also stuttered, for years. I fell, damaged up by C1 - spinal cord lesion up there, ver...

Causes & VariabilityIdentity & DisabilitySchool & Work
Neurological & BrainTrauma & PsychologicalMedicalization / Neurodiversity+3 more
postr/StutterOct 13, 2020
5 points

Is Stuttering More Of A Psychological Aspect Than A Technical One?

Is Stuttering More Of A Psychological Aspect Than A Technical One? They say, ”Stuttering is just in the head.” What if a PWS (Person Who Stutters) meets a severe road/ car accident and suffers through...

Causes & VariabilityIdentity & Disability
Neurological & BrainTrauma & PsychologicalMedicalization / Neurodiversity
commentr/StutterOct 13, 2020
1 points

This happened to me at the age of 8, what I should have done then is gotten my neck massaged out. Turns out my whole neck-jaw area was really tight and this was inducing speech difficulties. Didn’t st...

Causes & VariabilitySpeech & Stuttering
Neurological & BrainPhysical Tension
commentr/StutterOct 12, 2020
2 points

From everything I’ve researched in an effort to find out about my own difficulties, it sounds like you may have developed a stutter a result of an injury to your brain. Could not be hereditary if it h...

Causes & VariabilitySpeech & Stuttering
Neurological & BrainOnset & Life-Stage Changes
commentr/StutterOct 12, 2020
2 points

This is a recently released article so I'm having a difficult time finding/pirating a full version, but I"ll relate what I understand from the abstract. ​ Brodman's Areas 44 and 45 (towar...

Causes & VariabilityCommunity & Support
Neurological & BrainResearch & Resources
commentr/StutterOct 12, 2020
2 points

Hm, no access. But the abstract simply says: - >our results provide supportive evidence that right anterior BA45 **may be** a critical region for stuttering. The observed differential effects fol...

Causes & VariabilityCommunity & Support
Neurological & BrainResearch & Resources
commentr/StutterOct 9, 2020
1 points

Nature or nurture. There is no real science to prove or disprove it either way. Some stutters are developmental and could be a result of learned behaviours and a cycle of anxiety. Others are linked t...

Causes & Variability
Genetic & Family FactorsTrauma & PsychologicalNeurological & Brain+1 more
commentr/StutterOct 8, 2020
1 points

I will, also I never said stuttering has a physical cause. It is neurophysiological disorder. Which manifests itself in the form of stuttering. I will gather the information and send it to you....

Causes & Variability
Neurological & Brain
commentr/StutterOct 8, 2020
4 points

If you started stuttering as an adult, there might be something wrong with your brain. I’d recommend visiting a neurologist ASAP and getting some brain scans done....

Causes & VariabilitySpeech & Stuttering
Neurological & BrainOnset & Life-Stage Changes
commentr/StutterOct 8, 2020
1 points

Please, show me those studies, which give an explanation about why stuttering (which has no apparent physical causes) in incurable. And if it's really physical, why can't surgery or a medicine give us...

Causes & VariabilityTherapy & Professional
Neurological & BrainSituational VariabilityCure Claims / Alt-Treats