Browsing Health Sciences Campus by Author "Kalinowski, Joseph Stanley"
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Cultural influence on listener responses to stuttering
Zhang, Jianliang (East Carolina University, 2010)Stuttering is a developmental, involuntary, and intermittent fluency disorder. During moments of stuttering, people who stutter demonstrate sudden onsets and offsets of the aberrant struggling behaviors, with primary ... -
Effect of Single and Combined Altered Auditory Feedback on Stuttering Frequency at Two Speech Rates
MacLeod, Jennifer; Kalinowski, Joseph Stanley; Stuart, Andrew (East Carolina University, 1995)The purpose of the study was to determine if combining delayed auditory feedback (DAF) and frequency altered feedback (FAF) would be more fluency enhancing than either DAF or FAF alone. Ten stutterers read at normal and ... -
Inducement of Fluent Speech in Persons Who Stutter Via Visual Choral Speech
Kalinowski, Joseph Stanley; Stuart, Andrew; Rastatter, Michael P.; Snyder, Gregory; Dayalu, Vikram N. (East Carolina University, 2000)A novel phenomenon of fluency enhancement via visual gestures of speech in the absence of traditional auditory feedback is reported herein. The effect on visual choral speech on stuttering frequency was investigated. Ten ... -
Investigations Of The Impact Of Altered Auditory Feedback In-The-Ear Devices On The Speech Of People Who Stutter: Initial Fitting And Four-Month Follow-Up
Stuart, Andrew; Kalinowski, Joseph Stanley; Rastatter, Michael P.; Saltuklaroglu, Tim; Dayalu, Vikram N. (East Carolina University, 2004)Background: Self-contained ear-level devices delivering altered auditory feedback (AAF) for the application with those who stutter were only recently developed (Stuart et al. 2003). Aim: This paper examines the first ... -
Methods and devices for delivering exogenously generated speech signals to enhance fluency in persons who stutter
Rastatter, Michael P.; Kalinowski, Joseph Stanley; Stuart, Andrew (East Carolina University, 2004-06-22)Methods and devices generate an exogenous natural second speech signal as an auditory stimulus to a user to enhance the fluency of persons who stutter. The natural speech signal is independent of the contemporaneous speech ... -
Methods and devices for enhancing fluency in persons who stutter employing visual speech gestures
Kalinowski, Joseph Stanley; Rastatter, Michael P.; Stuart, Andrew (East Carolina University, 2006-04-18)Methods, devices, and computer program products display visual choral speech to a patient who stutters or has a speech impediment or impairment as a visual stimulus for the patient to enhance the fluency of the patient. ... -
Priming Anxiety into People who Stutter: Arousal's Influence on Fluency
Hudock, Daniel Joseph (East Carolina University, 2008-11)Many experimental psychologists (Bargh, Chen & Burrows, 1996; Berner & Maier, 2004; Bowers, 1999; Chartrand, VanBaaren & Bargh, 2006; Chen & Haviland-Jones, 2000; Hazlett, Dawson, Schell & Filion, 1990; Macky-Sim & Laing, ... -
Self-contained In-The-Ear device to deliver altered auditory feedback: applications for stuttering
Stuart, Andrew; Xia, Shixiong; Jiang, Yining; Jiang, Tao; Kalinowski, Joseph Stanley; Rastatter, Michael P. (East Carolina University, 2003)The design and operating characteristics of the first self-contained in-the-ear device to deliver altered auditory feedback is described for applications with those who stutter. The device incorporates a microdigital signal ... -
Stereotypes of Stutterers and Nonstutterers in Three Rural Communities in Newfoundland
Stuart, Andrew; Doody, Irene; Kalinowski, Joseph Stanley; Armson, Joy (East Carolina University, 1993-12)The existence of a negative stereotype of stutterers among residents of three Small, rural communities in Newfoundland, Canada was investigated. Members of these communities (n=106) completed a 25 item semantic differential ...