Stuttering: I. A Critical Review and Evaluation of Biochemical Investigations
- 1 September 1944
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Speech Language Hearing Association in Journal of Speech Disorders
- Vol. 9 (3), 245-261
- https://doi.org/10.1044/jshd.0903.246
Abstract
Review of modern literature on the biochemistry of stuttering. No corroborative findings have been made in regard to a possible biochemical etiology of stuttering. The author believes that if such findings were to be made they could be demonstrated to be the result of stuttering rather than etiological.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- A comparative study of the blood chemistry of stutterers and non‐stutterersSpeech Monographs, 1940
- A study of the medical history of stuttering childrenSpeech Monographs, 1938
- SERUM CALCIUM IN THE PSYCHOSESThe Lancet, 1937
- The Reliability of the pH of Human Mixed Saliva as an Indicator of Physiological Changes Accompanying BehaviorPublished by JSTOR ,1935
- Metabolic studies of stutterers∗Speech Monographs, 1934
- Serum calcium in juvenile delinquents.American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 1934
- Chemical factors and the stuttering spasmQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1933
- Stuttering: Its neuro-physiological basis and probable causation.American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 1932
- Stammering in relation to hemo‐respiratory factorsQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1930
- The Hydrogen Ion Concentration of the Mixed Saliva Considered as an Index of Fatigue and of Emotional Excitation, and Applied to a Study of the Metabolic Etiology of StammeringThe American Journal of Psychology, 1922