Daniel Hudock, Ph.D., CCC-SLP
Associate Professor
Founder/Director of the Northwest Center for Fluency Disorders (NWCFD)
Office: Pocatello, SPA Building 68, Room 322
Education
- Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Communication Sciences and Disorders, 2012, East Carolina University
- Masters of Science (M.S.) in Communication Sciences and Disorders, 2008, East Carolina University
- Bachelor of Science (B.S.) in Communication Sciences and Disorders, 2006, Clarion University of Pennsylvania
Professional Areas of Interests: Stuttering and other fluency-based disorders, counseling and interprofessional collaborations between mental-health professionals and Speech Language Pathologists, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), and the neuroscience of speech perception and production as measured via EEG.
Research Interest Include: Training and outcomes related to interprofessional collaborations between mental-health professionals and Speech Language Pathologists, holistic stuttering therapy targeting emotional, psychological, and social impacts from communication disorders, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), sender / receiver dynamics during communication exchanges via biopsychophysiological measures (electro-dermal skin conductance response, heart-rate variability, and eye-tracking), and EEG analysis of speech perception and production in fluent speakers and speakers who stutter.
Personal Interests/Hobbies: Anything outdoors (camping, backpacking, hiking, mountain biking, kayaking, spending time at the beach, etc.), traveling, sports (racquetball, tennis, golf, disc golf, softball.), the Pittsburgh Steelers, the arts (plays, musicals, galleries, exhibitions, museums, concerts), spending time with family, dining, cooking, technology, listening to podcasts, watching TED videos, reading, anything to do with science and pretty much anything else.