Using time-out to treat advanced stuttering

This study involved trialing an operant conditioning procedure known as time-out, as a treatment for adolescents and adults who stutter. Time-out requires individuals to pause briefly after stuttering and to resume talking after a pause in this case, of five seconds. A randomised control group desig...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Franklin, Diane E.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Curtin University 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/1425
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author Franklin, Diane E.
author_facet Franklin, Diane E.
author_sort Franklin, Diane E.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This study involved trialing an operant conditioning procedure known as time-out, as a treatment for adolescents and adults who stutter. Time-out requires individuals to pause briefly after stuttering and to resume talking after a pause in this case, of five seconds. A randomised control group design was used to evaluate the effectiveness of time-out treatment. Sixty participants were randomly assigned to either a time-out treatment or control group. The results demonstrated that individuals who stutter are highly responsive to time-out treatment. The impact of the severity of the stutter, a person's age, previous treatment, and the nature of the stutter on treatment outcome, were also investigated. Baseline severity was a strong predictor of treatment outcome, and to a lesser degree, previous treatment and speech rate were found to share some influence over treatment success. In addition, there was an unexpected change in the stuttering topography over the experiment conditions.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-14252017-02-20T06:38:22Z Using time-out to treat advanced stuttering Franklin, Diane E. speech stuttering time-out treatment This study involved trialing an operant conditioning procedure known as time-out, as a treatment for adolescents and adults who stutter. Time-out requires individuals to pause briefly after stuttering and to resume talking after a pause in this case, of five seconds. A randomised control group design was used to evaluate the effectiveness of time-out treatment. Sixty participants were randomly assigned to either a time-out treatment or control group. The results demonstrated that individuals who stutter are highly responsive to time-out treatment. The impact of the severity of the stutter, a person's age, previous treatment, and the nature of the stutter on treatment outcome, were also investigated. Baseline severity was a strong predictor of treatment outcome, and to a lesser degree, previous treatment and speech rate were found to share some influence over treatment success. In addition, there was an unexpected change in the stuttering topography over the experiment conditions. 2002 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/1425 en Curtin University fulltext
spellingShingle speech
stuttering
time-out treatment
Franklin, Diane E.
Using time-out to treat advanced stuttering
title Using time-out to treat advanced stuttering
title_full Using time-out to treat advanced stuttering
title_fullStr Using time-out to treat advanced stuttering
title_full_unstemmed Using time-out to treat advanced stuttering
title_short Using time-out to treat advanced stuttering
title_sort using time-out to treat advanced stuttering
topic speech
stuttering
time-out treatment
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/1425