“…Stuttering has long been described as a disorder of speech motor discoordination and instability, with intervals of fluency and disfluency not observed as dichotomous phenomena, but instead as events along a continuum of speech motor coordination (Adams & Runyan, 1981;Van Riper, 1982;Zimmermann, Smith, & Hanley, 1981). Even when perceptually fluent, the speech of individuals who stutter has been associated with atypical speech motor coordination (Caruso, Abbs, & Gracco, 1988;McClean, 2004;McClean, Kroll, & Loftus, 1990;Zimmermann, 1980) and increased articulatory variability (Kleinow & Smith, 2000;MacPherson & Smith, 2013;Smith, Goffman, Sasisekaran, & Weber-Fox, 2012) compared to typically fluent controls. Adults who stutter (AWS) have exhibited atypical speech and nonspeech motor performance compared to their typical peers, specifically in coordination tasks between different motor components or effector systems (Forster & Webster, 2001;Zelaznik, Smith, Franz, & Ho, 1997).…”