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DOI: 10.1055/s-0034-1371758
Self-Assessment Questions
Publication History
Publication Date:
29 April 2014 (online)
This section provides a review. Mark each statement on the Answer Sheet according to the factual materials contained in this issue and the opinions of the authors.
Article One (pp. 67–79)
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According to studies reviewed in this article, which of the following statements is true regarding brain areas that support speech and language?
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Brain structures outside of the perisylvian region do not have a role in supporting speech and language.
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Perisylvian speech and language areas, such as the inferior frontal and superior temporal gyri, tend to develop most rapidly during childhood, compared with other areas in the brain.
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Each brain area has a special function and supports a specific function that is independent of other brain areas.
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Previous research suggests that there are no gender differences in the development of brain regions that support speech and language.
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None of the above is true.
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Which of the following statements about brain development is true?
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During the first few years of life, there is a great increase in the number of nerve cells to support proper development
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Compared with at birth, a child's brain contains many more neurons and much less white matter volume.
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Brain development can be greatly influenced by environmental stimuli, such as learning and training.
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Boys tend to experience faster peak growth in most areas of the brain than girls.
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None of the above is true.
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Which of the following statements about brain structural measurements obtained with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is true?
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Brain structural measurements can only be obtained in adults but not from children whose brains are still developing.
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Children who stutter cannot be scanned repeatedly with MRI due to exposure to radiation.
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Diffusion tensor imaging is a technique that is used to measure gray matter development.
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Changes in gray matter volume, density, and thickness that reflect brain development and neuroplasticity as a result of training can be examined using MRI.
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Changes in white and gray matter related to training cannot be measured using MRI.
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Research examining children who stutter suggests which of the following?
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The brain responses of children who stutter in the left auditorymotor regions may be different from those of children who do not stutter.
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Linguistic and prosodic functions are lateralized to the right hemisphere in children who stutter.
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According to recent research findings, as a group, girls who stutter appear to have more typical connectivity in the auditory-motor regions compared with boys who stutter.
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Both A and C are true.
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All of the above are true.
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Which of the following statements about potential clinical applications of neuroimaging research is false?
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Neuroimaging methods can be used to examine treatment effects by comparing brain measurements before and after a treatment program.
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Longitudinal studies that examine brain developmental trajectories in children who stutter have potential to reveal mechanisms of persistence versus recovery, which may aid in prognosis in the future.
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Results from neuroimaging research can guide brain stimulation research that may seek to enhance neuroplasticity that is conducive to achieving fluent speech.
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Currently MRI technology can reveal brain structure that predicts whether an individual will persist or recover in stuttering.
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None of the above is false.
Article Two (pp. 80–94)
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This study suggested that significant life events and home environments
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can predict stuttering severity
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do not predict stuttering severity
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could be significant for a child with a reactive temperament but cannot be generalized across all children who stutter
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B and C
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According to Goldsmith and colleagues, 4 temperament refers to
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the emotional predisposition of young children and infants
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contextually driven behavioral attributes in young children
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emotionally driven behavioral attributes in young children
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stable, early appearing differences in behavioral tendencies that have a constitutional basis
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According to Rothbart and Bates (1998), Effortful Control is
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part of a large executive system that works in combination with other systems regulating behavior, memory, and cognitive information
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part of a small cognitive network that regulates temperament
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the ability to control one's behaviors with a substantial amount of effort
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directly related to negative affectivity and aggression in young children
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In this study, poor Effortful Control was significantly correlated with
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lower stuttering severity ratings
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higher stuttering severity ratings
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surgency and extraversion
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no correlation was evident
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It is proposed in this study that children who demonstrate high Effortful Control abilities
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are better able to replace an undesired behavior with a desired behavior
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can better cope with external stressors
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can better resource flexibility in speech behaviors
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all of the above
Article Three (pp. 95–113)
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The line of research focusing on the link between phonological factors and their role in fluency breakdown suggests which of the following?
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Persons who stutter and those who do not are comparable in phonological knowledge and phonological processing abilities.
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Persons who stutter show a higher propensity for stutter events at specific linguistic loci.
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Children who stutter show reduced phonemic knowledge compared with those who not stutter.
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Persons who stutter may be challenged in phonological encoding during speech production.
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Which of the following tasks has not been used to study phonological encoding abilities in persons who stutter?
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Rhyme judgment
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Priming
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Nonword repetition
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Phoneme monitoring
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Phonological processes
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Which of the following is not a conclusion based on this review?
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The occurrence of stuttering is influenced by phonological complexity of an utterance.
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Subgroups of persons who stutter may exhibit poor phonological encoding skills in speech.
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Children who stutter as a group differ from those who do not in standardized test measures of phonology.
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Subgroups of children who stutter exhibit dissociations within the different language domains.
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Studies of nonword repetition reveal the necessity to consider nonword properties in identifying differences between persons who stutter and those who do not.
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Which of the following is attributed to reduced phonemic encoding efficiency in persons who stutter?
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Reduced phonemic knowledge
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Increased phonemic complexity
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Reduced rhyme judgment abilities
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Increased errors in speech plan
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Limited incremental processing
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Incremental processing in speech production can be defined as processes related to
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generation of words from ideas
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generation of individual sound segments and stress information
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generation of syntactic features of spoken utterances
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planning of subsequent linguistic units while simultaneously executing ongoing utterances
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speech motor coordination
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Which of the following is not relevant to manipulating phonemic complexity?
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Using early 8, middle 8, and late 8 speech sounds
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Increasing the occurrence of both bi– (e.g., sk–, st–, pl–, fl–) and trisyllable clusters (e.g., spl–, str–)
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Varying phonotactic frequency of occurrence of sound combinations
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Using both words and nonwords
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Varying word familiarity
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Which of the following is an implication for treatment from studies of speech (phoneme) monitoring?
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Persons who stutter may exhibit slower encoding of speech sounds.
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Treatments that focus on teaching self-monitoring skills may benefit from employing hierarchies of complexity (e.g., monitoring words, phrases, sentences, reading, conversation), thereby allowing for sufficient compartmentalization of resources for incremental processing.
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Slower monitoring can deplete the availability of cognitive resources for speech planning and production.
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The time course of encoding may be progressively delayed with increasing length of utterances.
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Persons who stutter exhibit wordlearning difficulties.
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Which of the following may not be a direct implication for stuttering treatment based on this review?
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Incorporating mandatory phonemic knowledge training for all children who stutter
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Using stimuli varying systematically in phonological complexity
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Facilitating word learning through increased opportunities for practice
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Facilitating self-monitoring of speech while facilitating compartmentalization of resources for ongoing planning and production
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Promoting procedures, such as, chunking, to reduce constraints on incremental planning and to facilitate fluency
Article Four (pp. 114–131)
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Temperament can be thought of as
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a group of related traits or characteristics, such as individual differences in emotional reactivity, emotion regulation, attention, motor activity, among others
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a singular domain that specifies the magnitude of emotional response an individual has in novel situations
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an environmentally endowed proclivity toward emotional reactivity and emotion regulation following learned environmental interactions
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a psychological disorder of young children that influences speech and language development
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only expressed once an individual reaches adulthood
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Temperament, emotional reactivity, and emotion regulation are commonly assessed via
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acoustic measures of linguistic stress
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caregiver rating and report
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measures of truthfulness
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measures of height and weight
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handwriting samples
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In general, empirical studies have indicated that preschool-aged children who stutter (CWS), compared with their normally fluent peers, exhibit
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more age-appropriate temperament during the summer time (when not participating in environmental challenges, i.e., school)
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more negative affect/emotions
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greater attention and emotion regulation
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decreased disfluencies during emotional arousing situations with decreased regulatory behaviors
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increased disfluencies with decreased negative affect
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The article tentatively puts forth some clinical implications regarding temperament, emotion, and childhood stuttering. Which of the following is recommended based on “goodness-of-fit”?
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Standardized treatments are most likely the best fit for all preschoolaged CWS.
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Emotion regulation, when explicitly trained, decreases preschoolaged CWS' stuttering.
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Stuttering severity is the most useful tool to use when recommending treatment.
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Knowledge of temperamental characteristics may help a clinician better tailor therapy to a child's specific needs.
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Temperament and emotion are related only to treatment outcome, not type of treatment.
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Based on preliminary data discussed in this article, preschool-aged CWS with more expressive temperaments have been shown to
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exhibit the greatest long-term decrease in stuttered and total disfluencies as a result of indirect treatment
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exhibit a long-term increase in nonstuttered disfluencies during direct treatment
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speak less in all forms of treatment when they become tired, and therefore require shorter more frequent therapy sessions
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exhibit pragmatic changes in language prior to positive fluencyrelated changes
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always recover from (“grow out of”) stuttering prior to their inhibited CWS peers
Article Five (pp. 132–143)
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Which of the following is true for young people who stutter compared with their fluent peers?
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The life experiences are the same.
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Lower levels of adverse impact are seen in young people who stutter.
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Young people who stutter experience a reduced quality of life.
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“Zero negative reactions” to speaking are essential for successful therapy outcomes.
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Stuttering increases quality of life.
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Frequency of stuttering and quality of life are possibly related in what way?
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Low frequency of stuttering is related to reduced quality of life.
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Higher levels of stuttering are related to reduced emotional functioning.
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Severity of stuttering is not related to quality of life.
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People with more severe stuttering are more likely to be impaired physically.
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None of the above is true.
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According to the sibling study, what is experienced by the sibling dyads with a child who stutters compared with those with exclusively fluent siblings?
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greater closeness, greater conflict, and greater disparity
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greater closeness, less conflict, and less disparity
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greater closeness, greater conflict, and less disparity
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less closeness, greater conflict, and greater disparity
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less closeness, less conflict, and less disparity
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The parenting research compared parents and children who stutter with parents of children who do not stutter and found
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lower overall parental attachment, lower overall peer attachment
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lower overall parental attachment, higher perceived parental trust, lower perceived peer communication
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higher overall parental attachment, higher perceived parental communication, higher overall parental attachment
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lower overall parental attachment, lower perceived parental trust, higher perceived peer communication
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higher perceived parental alienation, higher perceived parental communication, lower perceived peer alienation
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Research including the partners of adults who stutter revealed which of the following to be correct?
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People who stutter reported more negative reactions to stuttering than their partners.
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There were differences in the responses of speakers and their partners in terms of quality-oflife responses.
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People who stutter reported less negative reactions to stuttering than their partners.
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Partners had difficulty with acceptance of stuttering in their loved one.
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Partners had difficulty offering support to their loved one who stutters.
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Which of the following is the central aim of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy?
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Suppress thoughts and control emotions
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Promote psychological flexibility
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Eliminate stuttered speech behaviors
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Replace negative thoughts with positive ones
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Engage in positive affirmations
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Which of the following summarizes the core processes of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy?
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Self-content, fusion, avoidance, mindfulness, goals, and committed action
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Self-concept, fusion, acceptance, mindlessness, goals, and committed action
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Self-content, defusion, avoidance, mindfulness, values, and action
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Self-concept, illusion, acceptance, mindfulness, values, and committed action
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Self-concept, defusion, acceptance, mindfulness, values, and committed action
Article Six (pp. 144–152)
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Which of the following is true regarding atypical disfluency (wordfinal repetition)?
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The origin of atypical disfluency has been linked to developmental stuttering.
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Case studies have documented atypical disfluency among children with autism spectrum disorders, children with acquired neurogenic disorders, and typically developing children with no known disorders.
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Atypical disfluency is a known feature of autism spectrum disorder.
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Atypical disfluency has been documented as a restricted repetitive behavior among those with autism spectrum disorder.
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The child described in this study demonstrated
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stuttering-like disfluencies accompanied by secondary behavior and emotional reaction
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stuttering-like disfluencies and atypical disfluencies accompanied by secondary behavior and emotional reaction
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stuttering-like disfluencies, other disfluencies (OD), and atypical disfluencies with no secondary behavior or emotional reaction
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stuttering-like disfluencies and atypical disfluencies with no secondary behavior or emotional reaction
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An important treatment strategy for reduction of atypical disfluency in this case was
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prolonged speech
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pullouts
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easy onset
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identification
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In the case described, treatment resulted in all of the following except
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reduction of speech rate (intended syllables per minute)
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increased awareness of atypical disfluency
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reduction of atypical disfluency
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maintenance at posttreatment evaluations
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Careful consideration was given to individualized teaching strategies
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in developing home assignments for the child
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for teaching the child to selfmonitor
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when dealing with monologues and off-task behavior
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appropriate for children who stutter
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