STUDIES IN STUTTERING
- 1 December 1927
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Neurology & Psychiatry
- Vol. 18 (6) , 998-1014
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archneurpsyc.1927.02210060133004
Abstract
A previous paper1 has suggested the value of study of the stutterer's voice and speech by means of the photographic method. It also indicated the desirability of contrasting objective records of different kinds of speech, such as emotional and unemotional, repetitive and propositional and the several combinations of these varieties. In this paper, I shall report a study of emotional and unemotional repetitive speech and unemotional propositional speech. On several occasions, the voice and the breath stream were photographed during the act of stuttering, and these records furnished interesting additional data for study. Methods of photographing the voice have been well worked out in the Psychology Laboratory of the University of Iowa and are fully reported by Herzberg,2 Kwahlwasser,3 Simon4 and Metfessel.5 Briefly, Dorsey phonelescopes are used as optical levers for recording both the sound waves of the voice and the 100 double vibration tuningThis publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: