A Choral Assist For Stutterers

People who stutter--and there are 3 million of them in the U.S.--tend to do better when they speak in unison, as in a group reciting the Pledge of Allegiance. That's why a new hearing-aid-like device called the SpeechEasy seems to help. Invented by researchers at East Carolina University in Greenville, N.C., it's a tiny, programmable earpiece that alters the pitch of the speaker's voice and echoes it back into the ear. This "choral effect" tricks the brain into thinking someone else is talking and encourages fluent speech. In initial tests, the SpeechEasy worked for about 85% of stutterers. The effect is nearly instantaneous; but like glasses for the nearsighted, it lasts only as long as the device is being used. --By Sora Song

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BRIAN ROWE, 56, a homeless war veteran in England, saying on Veterans Day that the British government doesn't do enough for those who have fought for their country once they are civilians again
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BRIAN ROWE, 56, a homeless war veteran in England, saying on Veterans Day that the British government doesn't do enough for those who have fought for their country once they are civilians again

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