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Unscheduled Telephone Calls to Measure Percent Syllables Stuttered During Clinical Trials Publisher Pubmed



Karimi H1, 2 ; Obrian S1 ; Onslow M1 ; Jones M3 ; Menzies R1 ; Packman A1
Authors
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Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. Australian Stuttering Research Centre, The University of Sydney, Australia
  2. 2. Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Iran
  3. 3. The University of Queensland, Australia

Source: Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research Published:2013


Abstract

Purpose: Researchers have used unscheduled telephone calls for many years during clinical trials to measure adult stuttering severity before and after treatment. Because variability is a hallmark of stuttering severity with adults, it is questionable whether an unscheduled telephone call is truly representative of their everyday speech. Method: The authors studied the speech of 9 men and 1 woman for a 12-hr day during different speaking activities. On that day and 1 week prior to that day, participants received an unscheduled 10-min telephone call from a person unknown to them. The authors compared the percent syllables stuttered (%SS) for the unscheduled telephone call on the day to the %SS of the unsch eduled telephone call 1 week prior to the day and to the %SS during the entire day. Results: No significant differences were found, and all confidence intervals with t tests included 0. The concordance correlation test also showed a strong positive correlation between %SS scores for the entire day and for the unscheduled 10-min telephone call. Conclusion: The authors conclude that there is no reason to doubt that 10-min unscheduled telephone calls are a representative speech sample for %SS during clinical trials of stuttering treatments. © American Speech-Language-Hearing Association.
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