21 Feb 2016
The Way We Talk: When Stuttering Truly Becomes Okay (Ep. 569)
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Michael Turner joins Christopher Constantino to discuss The Way We Talk, an award winning documentary about stuttering.
Michael Turner is a filmmaker and a person who stutters. Turner was awarded the 2015 Oregon Media Arts Fellowship for The Way We Talk, his documentary about his experiences with stuttering. The film is currently touring festivals and universities nationwide, and premieres internationally next month at the One World International Human Rights Film Festival in Prague. Mike lives in Oregon and is about to become a dad.
Christopher Constantino is a person who stutters, a StutterTalk host and a PhD student in Communication Sciences and Disorders at the University of Memphis. Chris is doing his clinical fellowship in the Shelby County Schools in Memphis and is conducting a research study to understand and contextualize the experiences of passing as fluent for people who covertly stutter.







13 Mar 2016
Sex-Specific Speech Motor Differences in Preschoolers Who Stutter (Ep. 571)
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Dr. Bridget Walsh joins Peter Reitzes to discuss her study Speech motor planning and execution deficits in early childhood stuttering in the Journal of Neurodevelopmental Disorders.
As stated in the research, “This study is the first to demonstrate sex-specific differences in speech motor control processes between preschool boys and girls who are stuttering. The sex-specific lag in speech motor development in many boys who stutter likely has significant implications for the dramatically different recovery rates between male and female preschoolers who stutter.”
Bridget Walsh, Ph.D. CCC-SLP is a Research Scientist and a speech-language pathologist in the Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences at Purdue University. For more information, visit the Purdue Stuttering Project.