<span>The revised edition ofΒ </span><span>A</span><span>Β Handbook on Stuttering</span><span> continues its remarkable role as the authoritative, first-line resource for researchers and clinicians who work in the field of fluency and stuttering. Now in its seventh edition, this unique book</span><spa
A Handbook on Stuttering
β Scribed by Oliver Bloodstein (Editor), Nan Bernstein Ratner (Editor), Shelley B. Brundage (Editor)
- Publisher
- Plural Publishing Inc
- Year
- 2021
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 1091
- Edition
- 7
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Foreword
Preface
About the Authors
Reviewers
Acknowledgments
Dedication
Section I. Understanding the Nature of Stuttering
1. Defining and Describing Stuttering
2. The Demography of Stuttering: Across the Life Span, Families, and Communities
3. Early Childhood Disfluency and Stuttering Onset
4. Developmental, Medical, Familial, and Educational History of PWS, and the Social and Vocational Impacts of Stuttering
5. Theories and Models of Stuttering
Section II. The Quest for Underlying Mechanisms
6. Central Neurological Findings
7. Motor and Sensory Abilities
8. Anticipation, Anxiety, and Stuttering
9. Personality and Temperament
10. Cognitive and Linguistic Abilities
Section III. Assessment and Treatment of Stuttering
11. Conditions Under Which Stuttering Fluctuates
12. Myths and Mysteries About Stuttering
13. Assessment of Stuttering
14. Treatment
References
Index
Back Cover
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
64 p. : 23 cm +
Have you ever wondered why most people who block or stutter do not stammer every single time that they speak? Indeed, most people who stammer are actually consistently fluent in certain contexts. When by themselves, speaking to a pet, or speaking to a person with whom they are very comfortable, they
<b>An intimate, candid memoir about a lifelong struggle to speak. • “A raw, intimate look at [Hendrickson's] life with a stutter. It’s a profoundly moving book that will reshape the way you think about people living with this condition.”—<i>Esquire</i></b><br><b>“B