
Executive functioning in childhood stuttering
- Author
- Kurt Eggers (UGent)
- Organization
- Abstract
- Executive functions are a set of cognitive processes necessary for the cognitive control of behavior. Over the last couple of years, our research group has used neurocognitive computer paradigm-based and ERP-based studies to evaluate executive functioning in children who stutter. Current presentation will give an overview of the research findings, specifically in the domain of attentional functioning, response control, and auditory processing. Findings will be linked to the available literature of other research groups.
Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-01GQVXT2TPWG405DC00VNQ5ZH3
- MLA
- Eggers, Kurt. “Executive Functioning in Childhood Stuttering.” Annual Conference of the National Logopedic Organization 2019, Abstracts, 2019.
- APA
- Eggers, K. (2019). Executive functioning in childhood stuttering. Annual Conference of the National Logopedic Organization 2019, Abstracts. Presented at the Annual conference of the National Logopedic Organization 2019, Brno, Czech Republic.
- Chicago author-date
- Eggers, Kurt. 2019. “Executive Functioning in Childhood Stuttering.” In Annual Conference of the National Logopedic Organization 2019, Abstracts.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Eggers, Kurt. 2019. “Executive Functioning in Childhood Stuttering.” In Annual Conference of the National Logopedic Organization 2019, Abstracts.
- Vancouver
- 1.Eggers K. Executive functioning in childhood stuttering. In: Annual conference of the National Logopedic Organization 2019, Abstracts. 2019.
- IEEE
- [1]K. Eggers, “Executive functioning in childhood stuttering,” in Annual conference of the National Logopedic Organization 2019, Abstracts, Brno, Czech Republic, 2019.
@inproceedings{01GQVXT2TPWG405DC00VNQ5ZH3, abstract = {{Executive functions are a set of cognitive processes necessary for the cognitive control of behavior. Over the last couple of years, our research group has used neurocognitive computer paradigm-based and ERP-based studies to evaluate executive functioning in children who stutter. Current presentation will give an overview of the research findings, specifically in the domain of attentional functioning, response control, and auditory processing. Findings will be linked to the available literature of other research groups.}}, author = {{Eggers, Kurt}}, booktitle = {{Annual conference of the National Logopedic Organization 2019, Abstracts}}, language = {{eng}}, location = {{Brno, Czech Republic}}, title = {{Executive functioning in childhood stuttering}}, year = {{2019}}, }