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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Epidemiology of stuttering: 21st century advances.

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TLDR
Most of the risk for stuttering onset is over by age 5, earlier than has been previously thought, with a male-to-female ratio near onset smaller than what has been thought.
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This article is published in Journal of Fluency Disorders.The article was published on 2013-06-01 and is currently open access. It has received 388 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Stuttering & Population.

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Effect of linguistic factors on the occurrence of stuttering-like disfluency among Japanese-speaking preschool children who stutter.

TL;DR: The authors investigated the linguistic factors involved in stuttering among Japanese-speaking preschool children and found that SLDs occurred more frequently in the initial than non-initial position of words and in longer rather than shorter words.
Posted Content

Machine Learning for Stuttering Identification: Review, Challenges & Future Directions.

TL;DR: This paper reviewed comprehensively acoustic features, statistical and deep learning-based stuttering/disfluency classification methods, and presented several challenges and possible future directions for stuttering identification.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Trends in the prevalence of developmental disabilities in US children, 1997-2008.

TL;DR: Autism, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and other developmental delays increased, whereas hearing loss showed a significant decline, and trends were found in all of the sociodemographic subgroups, except for autism in non-Hispanic black children.
Book

A handbook on stuttering

TL;DR: Theories of stuttering are discussed in this paper and early stuttering and normal disfluency of stutter patients are discussed. But the diagnosis and treatment of STDs are not discussed.
Book

Stuttering: An Integrated Approach to Its Nature and Treatment

Barry Guitar
TL;DR: The nature of Stuttering, Constitutional Factors, and Research Findings on Constitutional Factors; other Fluency Disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Early Childhood Stuttering I

TL;DR: The purpose of the investigation reported herein is to study the pathognomonic course of stuttering during its first several years in early childhood with special reference to the occurrence of persistent and spontaneously recovered forms of the disorder.
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