Research Article | September 01, 1947A Psychosomatic Theory of Stuttering Isaac W. Karlin Author Notes * Dr. Karlin (M.D., Illinois) is Associate Pediatrician and Physician in charge of the Speech Clinic, Pediatric Department, Jewish Hospital, Brooklyn, New York.Dr. Karlin (M.D., Illinois) is Associate Pediatrician and Physician in charge of the Speech Clinic, Pediatric Department, Jewish Hospital, Brooklyn, New York.× Copyright © 1947 American Speech-Language-Hearing Association Article Information Research Articles Research Article | September 01, 1947 A Psychosomatic Theory of Stuttering Journal of Speech Disorders, September 1947, Vol. 12, 319-322. doi:10.1044/jshd.1203.319 Journal of Speech Disorders, September 1947, Vol. 12, 319-322. doi:10.1044/jshd.1203.319 Web of Science® Times Cited: 8 View Article Figures Tables PDF PDF Supplemental Data Supplements Multimedia Share Email Twitter Facebook Pinterest Tools Get Citation Citation Karlin, I. W. (1947). A Psychosomatic Theory of Stuttering. J Speech Disord, 12(3), 319-322. doi: 10.1044/jshd.1203.319. Download citation file: RIS (Zotero) EndNote BibTex Medlars ProCite RefWorks Reference Manager © 2018 American Speech-Language-Hearing Association × Alerts User Alerts You are adding an alert for: A Psychosomatic Theory of Stuttering You will receive an email whenever this article is corrected, updated, or cited in the literature. You can manage this and all other alerts in My Account The alert will be sent to: Confirm × Sign In or Create a free account to receive alerts. × This content is PDF only. Please click on the PDF icon to access. First Page Preview × View Large Subscribe to view more For full access to this article, log in to an existing user account, purchase an annual subscription, or purchase a short-term subscription. Order a Subscription Subscribe Pay Per View Entire Journal of Speech Disorders content & archive 24-hour access $30.00 Buy Now This Article 24-hour access $15.00 Buy Now Sign In or Create an Account Please sign in using your ASHA.org login. If you do not have an ASHA login, you may register with us for free by creating a new account. Sign In or Create an Account Related Articles Related Topics