摘掉不流利

IF 0.3 Q4 LINGUISTICS
C. Pudlinski, Rachel S. Y. Chen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:通常被理解为言语障碍的一种症状,口吃是指声音、单词或短语的言语重复,这些重复会阻碍说话人说话的进行。方法:通过会话分析,在美国同伴电话支持的录音中发现了180多个短语多音节口吃。结果:大多数短语结结巴巴都是由潜在的顺序、语义或句法问题的早期轮内指标引起的。口吃通常是通过快速节奏产生的,它是多种多样的,包括单词之间的声音闭锁、缩写词、单词混合和/或难以理解的声音。拉长或截断的声音通常表明口吃似乎结束了,在口吃结束时,要么放弃,要么通常流畅地完成当前的转弯。重要的是,另一个互动者从不打断或完成口吃。讨论/结论:这些发现与之前对口吃的对话分析研究相矛盾,并将口吃描述为一种正常的日常行为,在这种行为中,说话者可以成功地克服障碍,达到最终的流利程度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Destigmatizing disfluency
Background: Typically understood as a symptom of a speech disorder, stuttering is the verbal repetition of sounds, words, or phrases that suspend the progression of a speaker’s turn. Method: Using conversation analysis, over 180 phrasal multisyllabic stutters were found in audio recordings of peer telephone support in the United States. Results: Most phrasal stutters arise from early, within-turn indicators of potential sequential, semantic, or syntactic trouble. Typically produced with quick pacing, the stutters are varied, including the latching of sounds across words, abbreviated words, word blends, and/or unintelligible sounds. Elongated or cut-off sounds often indicate the seeming end of a stutter, with either abandonment or a typically fluent completion of a current turn occurring upon a stutter’s conclusion. Importantly, the other interactant never interrupts or completes the stutter. Discussion/conclusion: These findings contradict prior conversation analytic studies of stutters and describe stuttering as a normalized everyday action, where speakers can successfully navigate disfluency to reach eventual fluency.
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来源期刊
Journal of Interactional Research in Communication Disorders
Journal of Interactional Research in Communication Disorders Social Sciences-Linguistics and Language
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
3
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