Search
4,457 results
Its a neurological disability btw and those whos stuttering is genetical or comes from brain functions it will always slightly be there you just dont stutter as much i know somebody who only stutters ...
You never can overcome stuttering fully its caused by the brain and most i read abt has talked abt that theirs improved the stutter is still there Marilyn Monroe stuttered in a interview got told to s...
Glad to hear you found an effective treatment plan. My stutter came about when I was 28. Idk if this is from a head injury I didn’t know about, my chiari malformation I have, or something else. Doctor...
I'm more fluent when drinking, so I guess my dopamine base level is too low....
There’s a point where the dopamine levels in your brain are at the perfect balance which causes perfect smooth speech. Too high and it causes havoc. Too low and it causes slow sluggish speech. Mastur...
Ecopipam is a D2 partial dopamine antagonist. It doesn’t block dopamine completely, but helps balance it out, especially in the Striatum which is a main component for speech motor control. Prozac als...
Yes, stuttering is caused by a dysregulated dopaminergic system in the brain, especially in the striatum and basal ganglia (according to PET scans). This is why when you avoid substances which cause ...
Psychogenic vs. Neurogenic stuttering. How to tell the difference, and test for one, or the other
Psychogenic vs. Neurogenic stuttering. How to tell the difference, and test for one, or the other I’ve stuttered since I was 28. No history prior. I never figured out if my stuttering was from a brain...
This guy was a baller back in the 2000s in New Jersey with Jason Kidd, can't believe someone like him ever had it...
Each person has their own unique combination of things that creates their own unique version of stuttering. It's not just one thing that researchers can fix, it's a whole complicated stew of philologi...
I'm increasingly convinced my mild (occasionally moderate) stutter is caused solely by excess dopamine (i.e dopaminergic dysregulation). Here's why
I'm increasingly convinced my mild (occasionally moderate) stutter is caused solely by excess dopamine (i.e dopaminergic dysregulation). Here's why I am 21 year old college student and I've been posti...
Psychogenic vs. Neurogenic stuttering. How to tell the difference?
Psychogenic vs. Neurogenic stuttering. How to tell the difference? Just wondering how you tell the difference between psychogenic and neurogenic stuttering in people with late onset stutters. Are ther...
I wouldn't trust anything that comes from Elon Musk, be that a product or a promise. Dude is a liar From a scientific perspective, testing new drugs and devices takes a very long time with lots of ba...
Its still being tested. But what makes you think it could solve our stuttering? Its being used to transfer neural signals into actions like controlling a computer. I dont so how this solves stuttering...
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/pai.12580 Results: In multivariate models, controlling for age, demographic factors, healthcare utilization, and history of eczema, lifetime history...
Does asthma have any corelation to stuttering?
Does asthma have any corelation to stuttering? Im 19 rn and have had a stammering issue since like when I was 7 and coincidentally that is when I was diagnosed with having asthma. So idk if this has a...
Key point: "Instructing" does not imply a conscious effort to move speech muscles but rather a subconscious signal to the brain indicating when to initiate movement. See the distinction? "instru...
**Question**: How can I send an instruction to my subconscious brain to start executing the speech plan? **My reply:** Simply let your subconscious mind know when it should start speaking. In th...
Not normal at all. You should see a neurologist. Could be a tumor, which means unlike other stutterers you may be able to actually be cured....
I think it is close to a tic disorder, so physical. There is a psychological component because of the mental stress. Should be noted: all mental health is managable with the right scaffolding - talk t...