Background: Speech-language pathologists often multitask in order to be efficient with their commonly large caseloads. In stuttering assessment, multitasking often involves collecting multiple measures simultaneously.
Aims: The present study sought to determine reliability when collecting multiple measures simultaneously versus individually.
Methods & Procedures: Over two time periods, 50 graduate students viewed videos of four persons who stutter (PWS) and counted the number of stuttered syllables and total number of syllables uttered, and rated speech naturalness. Students were randomly assigned to one of two groups: the simultaneous group, in which all measures were gathered during one viewing; and the individual group, in which one measure was gathered per viewing. Relative and absolute intra- and inter-rater reliability values were calculated for each measure.
Outcomes & Results: The following results were notable: better intra-rater relative reliability for the number of stuttered syllables for the individual group (intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) = 0.839) compared with the simultaneous group (ICC = 0.350), smaller intra-rater standard error of measurement (SEM) (i.e., better absolute reliability) for the number of stuttered syllables for the individual group (7.40) versus the simultaneous group (15.67), and better inter-rater absolute reliability for the total number of syllables for the individual group (88.29) compared with the simultaneous group (125.05). Absolute reliability was unacceptable for all measures across both groups.
Conclusions & Implications: These findings show that judges are likely to be more reliable when identifying stuttered syllables in isolation than when simultaneously collecting them with total syllables spoken and naturalness data. Results are discussed in terms of narrowing the reliability gap between data collection methods for stuttered syllables, improving overall reliability of stuttering measurements, and a procedural change when implementing widely used stuttering assessment protocols.
What This Paper Adds: What is already known on the subject The reliability of stuttering judgments has been found to be unacceptable across a number of studies, including those examining the reliability of the most popular stuttering assessment tool, the Stuttering Severity Instrument (4th edition). The SSI-4, and other assessment applications, involve collecting multiple measures simultaneously. It has been suggested, but not examined, that collecting measures simultaneously, which occurs in the most popular stuttering assessment protocols, may result in substantially inferior reliability when compared to collecting measures individually. What this paper adds to existing knowledge The present study has multiple novel findings. First, relative and absolute intra-rater reliability were substantially better when stuttered syllables data were collected individually compared to when the same data were collected simultaneously with total number of syllables and speech naturalness data. Second, inter-rater absolute reliability for total number of syllables was also substantially better when collected individually. Third, intra-rater and inter-rater reliability were similar when speech naturalness ratings were given individually compared to when they were given while simultaneously counting stuttered and fluent syllables. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work? Clinicians can be more reliable when identifying stuttered syllables individually compared to when they judge stuttering along with other clinical measures of stuttering. In addition, when clinicians and researchers use current popular protocols for assessing stuttering that recommend simultaneous data collection, including the SSI-4, they should instead consider collecting stuttering event counts individually. This procedural change will lead to more reliable data and stronger clinical decision making.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1460-6984.12860 | DOI Listing |
Cortex
December 2024
Idaho State University, Department of Communication Sciences & Disorders, College of Health, Pocatello, ID, USA.
Objective: The primary aim of the current study was to determine whether adults who stutter (AWS) present with anomalous periodic beta (β) rhythms when compared to typically fluent adults in the eyes-open resting state. A second aim was to determine whether lower β power in the RS is related to a measure of β event-related desynchronization (ERD) during syllable sequence execution.
Methods: EEG data was collected from 128 channels in a 5 min, eyes-open resting state condition and from a syllable sequence repetition task.
J Fluency Disord
December 2024
Department of Speech-Language-Hearing Sciences, University of Minnesota Twin Cities, Shevlin Hall, 164 Pillsbury Drive SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA.
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to further investigate the association between social anxiety and stuttering severity among adults who stutter (AWS) at both the between- and within-person levels of analysis.
Method: Sixty-two AWS (women = 27, men = 35; M = 39.5 years, SD = 14.
J Commun Disord
November 2024
College of Education, Ibaraki University, Ibaraki, Japan.
Introduction: Stuttering is influenced by different linguistic factors, such as sentence- and word-level factors. However, its developmental differences remain unclear. Thus, this study examined the developmental differences in the linguistic factors associated with stuttering-like disfluencies (SLD) among Japanese preschool and school-aged children who stutter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Telemed Telecare
October 2024
Institute for Evidence-Based Healthcare, Bond University, Robina, Australia.
Percept Mot Skills
October 2024
All India Institute of Speech and Hearing, Mysore, India.
Stuttering is progressively reduced when persons who stutter repeatedly read the same text. This reduction has been recently attributed to motor learning with repeated practice of speech-motor sequences. In the present study, we investigated the adaptation effect of 17 bilingual adults who stutter (BAWS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!