An international research group led by researchers from the University of Turku and Turku University Hospital in Finland has succeeded in identifying the probable origin of stuttering in the brain.
Scientists have pinpointed the brain network that's involved in stuttering, brain scans reveal. The brain imaging results were described in a recent paper, published May 27 in the journal Brain.
“We know that in the context of this task, participants anticipate stuttering, meaning, they know when they are going to stutter,” says Eric S. Jackson, associate professor of communicative sciences ...
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- It's estimated that more than 79 million people worldwide live with a stutter. In the Bay Area, there's a small but mighty group looking to spread awareness and acceptance of ...
NORMAL, Ill. (AP) — During first grade, Eric Pace was called on by his teacher to answer a question. He stuttered and struggled through his answer. Other students laughed. Pace didn't know why. The ...
Their findings are published in Neurobiology of Language. "We know that in the context of this task, participants anticipate stuttering, meaning, they know when they are going to stutter," says Eric S ...
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