How do negative evaluation sensitivity, anxiety sensitivity, and expectancy combine to determine fear in people who stutter and people who do not stutter?

There has been a long history of research into the possible relationship between anxiety and stuttering. Despite this history, however, relatively little research has focused on components of anxiety and how these components combine to create fear responses in both fluent speakers and persons who st...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Robinson, John D.
Other Authors: DiLollo, Anthony
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Wichita State University 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10057/3702
id ndltd-WICHITA-oai-soar.wichita.edu-10057-3702
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-WICHITA-oai-soar.wichita.edu-10057-37022013-04-19T21:00:09ZHow do negative evaluation sensitivity, anxiety sensitivity, and expectancy combine to determine fear in people who stutter and people who do not stutter?Robinson, John D.Electronic dissertationsThere has been a long history of research into the possible relationship between anxiety and stuttering. Despite this history, however, relatively little research has focused on components of anxiety and how these components combine to create fear responses in both fluent speakers and persons who stutter. This study was designed to determine if differences existed between fluent speakers (FS) and persons who stutter (PWS) with respect to components of fear described by Reiss’ (1991) expectancy model. Twenty PWS and twenty FS were provided with a hypothetical social communication scenario and asked to complete measures related to predicted anxiety, anxiety sensitivity, fear of negative evaluation, and expectancy. Results indicated that the FS group behaved as predicted by Reiss’ model but the PWS group did not. Results suggested that clinicians working with people who stutter may tend to view their client’s anxiety based upon their own experiences. Clinicians should explore the client’s components of fear and how it is playing a role in their experience of stuttering.Thesis (M.A.)--Wichita State University, College of Health Professions, Dept. of Communication Sciences and Disorders.Wichita State UniversityDiLollo, Anthony2011-08-29T16:05:29Z2011-08-29T16:05:29Z20102010-08Thesisviii, 40 p.t10069http://hdl.handle.net/10057/3702en_US© Copyright 2010 by John D. Robinson. All rights reserved
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Electronic dissertations
spellingShingle Electronic dissertations
Robinson, John D.
How do negative evaluation sensitivity, anxiety sensitivity, and expectancy combine to determine fear in people who stutter and people who do not stutter?
description There has been a long history of research into the possible relationship between anxiety and stuttering. Despite this history, however, relatively little research has focused on components of anxiety and how these components combine to create fear responses in both fluent speakers and persons who stutter. This study was designed to determine if differences existed between fluent speakers (FS) and persons who stutter (PWS) with respect to components of fear described by Reiss’ (1991) expectancy model. Twenty PWS and twenty FS were provided with a hypothetical social communication scenario and asked to complete measures related to predicted anxiety, anxiety sensitivity, fear of negative evaluation, and expectancy. Results indicated that the FS group behaved as predicted by Reiss’ model but the PWS group did not. Results suggested that clinicians working with people who stutter may tend to view their client’s anxiety based upon their own experiences. Clinicians should explore the client’s components of fear and how it is playing a role in their experience of stuttering. === Thesis (M.A.)--Wichita State University, College of Health Professions, Dept. of Communication Sciences and Disorders.
author2 DiLollo, Anthony
author_facet DiLollo, Anthony
Robinson, John D.
author Robinson, John D.
author_sort Robinson, John D.
title How do negative evaluation sensitivity, anxiety sensitivity, and expectancy combine to determine fear in people who stutter and people who do not stutter?
title_short How do negative evaluation sensitivity, anxiety sensitivity, and expectancy combine to determine fear in people who stutter and people who do not stutter?
title_full How do negative evaluation sensitivity, anxiety sensitivity, and expectancy combine to determine fear in people who stutter and people who do not stutter?
title_fullStr How do negative evaluation sensitivity, anxiety sensitivity, and expectancy combine to determine fear in people who stutter and people who do not stutter?
title_full_unstemmed How do negative evaluation sensitivity, anxiety sensitivity, and expectancy combine to determine fear in people who stutter and people who do not stutter?
title_sort how do negative evaluation sensitivity, anxiety sensitivity, and expectancy combine to determine fear in people who stutter and people who do not stutter?
publisher Wichita State University
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10057/3702
work_keys_str_mv AT robinsonjohnd howdonegativeevaluationsensitivityanxietysensitivityandexpectancycombinetodeterminefearinpeoplewhostutterandpeoplewhodonotstutter
_version_ 1716583134743494656