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I discussed the circuitry involved and I linked a paper that provides the evidence for the mechanisms in a post I made. Here's a link to that post: [https://www.reddit.com/r/Stutter/comments/1hpmdhg/...
Yes, stuttering can emerge after a brain injury. Typically it would be experienced much sooner than 3 years after the accident. Were there other symptoms after the accident? Sometimes an adult can exp...
Would you say stuttering is a problem of too much dopamine or too little dopamine?...
It's not really about belief. It's more so that there is evidence indicating that dopamine can be dysregulated and medications can rectify the dysregulation, leading to fluency. Moreover, its been sho...
1.) Stuttering is not a psychological habit. It’s a neurological thing and the ADA has it listed as a legit disability. 2.) It’s not physical either. Invisible disability are well, non-physical disa...
Found this research on Google
Found this research on Google Researchers from Finland, New Zealand, the United States and Canada developed a new research design that could provide a solution to this problem. The study included ind...
It's different for everyone. For some people it's neurological, others psychological. Or some people have a hybrid of both. Or some people are not actual stutters they just have problems pronouncing c...
Is it possible that I got my stutter because I fell down from my hoverboard and landed really hard on the concrete floor with my head a couple of years before I gained the stutter?
Is it possible that I got my stutter because I fell down from my hoverboard and landed really hard on the concrete floor with my head a couple of years before I gained the stutter? ...
Singing and doing as many things to increase neuroplasticity, used my non-dominant hand to brush, learnt new skills, basically everything and the riskiest of all was hitting my neck at the base of the...
Just searched it. It's actually called 'Cerebral Hypoxia'. It can cause stuttering, and it might not cause stuttering. It depends from person to person....
advice for phd student with fluency disorder
advice for phd student with fluency disorder Hi all, I'm a first-year biology PhD student that clutters and has adhd/autism. I think my advisor is looking down on me because of my speech skills and I ...
The cause of stuttering is differences in our auditory processing system and our internal timing, which is what supports fluent speech and what the basal ganglia is partly responsible for. I believe t...
This contributor, also a stutter, is a neuroscientist. The posts explain stuttering neurologically. There are many answers there. Right now you’re experiencing the trauma of a bad, but random, bad sp...
Just like how a stutter is extremely hard to cure because it’s neurological. It seems like you’re making false assumptions to justify your case and get pity points. I do research on lots of conditions...
I have figured out that my psychogenic stutter block has a neurochemical aspect , since nothing physical like speech therapy works for me . When dopamine is naturally produced in my body in normal le...
Stuttering and ADHD
Stuttering and ADHD I sttutter and have ADHD. Anyone else????...
Stuttering and ADHD
Stuttering and ADHD I stutter and have ADHD. Does anyone else?...
Okay I’m a speech therapist. Firstly, a tongue tie most likely won’t impact speech sounds unless the tongue tie is severe enough to impact feeding. The range of motion required for accurate speech sou...
I have. So you're here talking with conviction on something you know nothing about? Research guides treatment, I'm sure you know that. Moreover, there are studies showing that there are certain things...
Tongue ties?
Tongue ties? Before I write this I’m not saying cutting a tongue tie will cure a stutter. Basically I came across a vid about tongue ties on TikTok and I have a tongue tie (ankyloglossia) . I went on...