Fluent speech, fast articulatory rate, and delayed auditory feedback: creating a crisis for a scientific revolution?
- PMID: 8668478
- DOI: 10.2466/pms.1996.82.1.211
Fluent speech, fast articulatory rate, and delayed auditory feedback: creating a crisis for a scientific revolution?
Abstract
In 1970 Kuhn argued that science does not progress through a process of accretion. It is typified, rather, by the successive emergence of different paradigms which during their reign dictate the direction of normal science's puzzle-solving activity. Normal science inevitably exposes an anomaly which violates expectations predicted by the reigning paradigm. The "crisis" evoking anomaly may induce a destructive/constructive paradigm change. Transformations from one paradigm to another constitute a scientific revolution and dictate the growth and maturation of a field. This paper suggests the recent finding, that stutterers experience enhancement of fluency while speaking under delayed auditory feedback at a fast articulatory rate, be viewed as an anomaly. By challenging the notion that a slowed speech rate is necessary for amelioration of stuttering, the anomalous finding may be perceived as a crisis in the study of stuttering.
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