Stuttering after right cerebellar infarction: A case study
We report a male patient with neurogenic stuttering after cerebellar infarction. He had suffered from frontal and thalamus damage and he had exhibited aphasia, but his speech had been fluent until onset of the cerebellar infarction. Results of analysis of speech samples included the following: (1) The patient showed very frequent syllable repetition and part-word repetition. (2) The stuttering occurrence rate at the second test was much higher than at the first test. (3) Almost all stuttering occurred on initial word sounds; stuttering on the medial and final word was less frequent. (4) Adaptation effect was absent. (5) Secondary behaviors such as closing of the eyes and grimacing were observed. The internal model related to cerebellar functions can be modified using feedback error information. Results suggest that internal model dysfunction caused this patient’s stuttering.
from Journal of Fluency Disorders
Posted on March 25, 2010, in Research and tagged cerebellum, internal model, Neurogenic stuttering. Bookmark the permalink. Leave a Comment.

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