https://online2.tingclass.net/lesson/shi0529/10000/10183/384.mp3
https://image.tingclass.net/statics/js/2012
With the age of electronics, it was found that hearing your own voice played back to you almost as soon as you speak helps a stutter as well. That’s called the “Delayed Auditory Feedback” effect. Altering the pitch of the playback gives an extra boost to the effect as well; that’s called “Frequency Altered Feedback.” Now, researchers at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina have created a small device that combines both these effects in a portable earpiece. The device fits inside your ear, picks up the sound of you speaking, alters the pitch a little, and plays it back to you. The first tests look promising: many of the volunteers who had a stutter found that their problem was helped by wearing such an electronic earpiece. Scientists who study stuttering sound a more cautious note: such effects, while real, have shown a tendency to be short-term. Still, even if it isn’t a “fix,” tiny microelectronic devices like this may indeed be a help–and we may be seeing more and more of them in the future.