Frontiers in Psychology (Sep 2021)

Performance of Bimanual Finger Coordination Tasks in Speakers Who Stutter

  • Akira Toyomura,
  • Akira Toyomura,
  • Tetsunoshin Fujii,
  • Paul F. Sowman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.679607
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Stuttering is a neurodevelopmental speech disorder characterized by the symptoms of speech repetition, prolongation, and blocking. Stuttering-related dysfluency can be transiently alleviated by providing an external timing signal such as a metronome or the voice of another person. Therefore, the existence of a core motor timing deficit in stuttering has been speculated. If this is the case, then motoric behaviors other than speech should be disrupted in stuttering. This study examined motoric performance on four complex bimanual tasks in 37 adults who stutter and 31 fluent controls. Two tasks utilized bimanual rotation to examine motor dexterity, and two tasks used the bimanual mirror and parallel tapping movements to examine timing control ability. Video-based analyses were conducted to determine performance accuracy and speed. The results showed that individuals who stutter performed worse than fluent speakers on tapping tasks but not on bimanual rotation tasks. These results suggest stuttering is associated with timing control for general motor behavior.

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