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Research published last year identified mutations in three genes that likely contribute to some cases of stuttering.
But it's unclear what function those genes have and much about the condition remains a mystery, Yairi said. A researcher and professor emeritus, Yairi is also a stutterer. He speaks at a measured, slow pace.
It used to be thought that stuttering was a psychological problem caused by anxiety or nervousness, and "The King's Speech" seems to suggest that George's mistreatment as a child may have contributed to his condition. But experts have largely dismissed that idea, Yairi said.
When children begin to stutter, they're usually too young to be aware of it and rarely seem anxious about their speech. It's only as they mature and perceive the negative reactions that they become anxious and ashamed, Yairi said.
Scientists also used to believe stuttering developed in some children in reaction to parents reprimanding them if they repeated words or sounds while learning to speak.
"We have shown that this is quite likely not the case," he said.
Still, Yairi said, it's true that "whatever the cause, negative reactions can make a big difference in how the disorder develops."
Aidan Hardy said he has been bullied and teased for stuttering. He hates it when people tell him to just calm down and focus.
"There are certain ways to help someone talk better and there are some things that most people think will help, but they don't. I'm hoping this movie will fix that," Aidan said.
Page, the columnist, said stutterers typically develop a deep vocabulary of words "to avoid our 'trouble' words." For Page, trouble comes from words that start with vowels. He uses substitutes, even going so far as to request a pear when he'd prefer an apple -- just to avoid tripping over the 'a'.
Speech therapist Stephanie Hirsh, who runs the Center for Communication & Fluency Therapy in Highland Park, Ill., says she learned to control her own stuttering partly by using a breathing technique to maintain a continuous flow of air while talking. In the film, the speech therapist used a similar method by having King George insert an "ah" sound into a sentence before a treacherous word.
Hirsh also offers this advice: Let stutterers know they have all the time they need to express themselves, and that you really want to hear what they have to say.
She said her own parents were advised by speech therapists not to talk about her stuttering and not to bring it to her attention.
The opposite approach is now favored. That may be why many stutterers have embraced "The King's Speech," for bringing stuttering out into the open.
"If we don't talk about it," Hirsh said, "then it becomes even scarier."
___
Online:
NIH:
http://www.nidcd.nih.gov/health/voice/stutter.asp
Stuttering Foundation of America:
http://www.stutteringhelp.org/
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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