Stuttering

1981 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerald N. Zimmermann ◽  
Anne Smith ◽  
John M. Hanley

Perceptually fluent and disfluent speech reflect a continuum of coordination and can be best understood in terms of similar motor control processes. Speech movements may be considered to result from the interaction of inputs to motoneuron pools which alter the tuning of sensory-motor pathways and triggering inputs to specific muscles and muscle groups. A disorder in coordination may occur when any of these inputs is aberrantly affected by psychological, psychosocial or physiological variables. Specific phenomena associated with stuttering--adaptation, masking, whispering and voicing deviations--are interpreted in terms of these neuromotor processes. Therapeutic considerations are discussed.

Author(s):  
Marcela Silva Couto ◽  
Thiago Russo ◽  
Gabriela Lopes dos Santos ◽  
Adriano Siqueira

Author(s):  
Shaun Gallagher

This chapter examines the concept of free will as it is discussed in philosophy and neuroscience. It reviews reflective and perceptual theories of agency and argues against neuro-centric conclusions about the illusory nature of free will. Experiments conducted by Benjamin Libet suggest that neural activations prior to conscious awareness predict specific actions. This has been taken as evidence that challenges the traditional notion of free will. Libet’s experiments, arguably, are about motor control processes on an elementary timescale and say nothing about freely willed intentional actions embedded in personal and social contexts that involve longer-term, narrative timescales. One implication of this interpretation is that enactivism is not a form of simple behaviorism. Agency is not a thing reducible to elementary neuronal processes; nor is it an idea or a pure consciousness. It rather involves a structure of complex relations.


1986 ◽  
pp. 247-261 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Williams ◽  
B. McClenaghan ◽  
D. Ward ◽  
W. Carter ◽  
C. Brown ◽  
...  
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