2,155 results on '"speech disorders"'
Search Results
2. Automatic Speech Recognition of Conversational Speech in Individuals With Disordered Speech.
- Author
-
Tobin, Jimmy, Nelson, Phillip, MacDonald, Bob, Heywood, Rus, Cave, Richard, Seaver, Katie, Desjardins, Antoine, Pan-Pan Jiang, and Green, Jordan R.
- Subjects
- *
SPEECH therapy , *AUTOMATIC speech recognition , *SPEECH therapists , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *CONVERSATION , *SPEECH , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *PILOT projects , *SEVERITY of illness index , *CELL phones , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LINGUISTICS , *METADATA , *ARTIFICIAL neural networks , *COMMUNICATION , *AUTOMATION , *SPEECH disorders , *SPEECH perception , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech - Abstract
Purpose: This study examines the effectiveness of automatic speech recognition (ASR) for individuals with speech disorders, addressing the gap in performance between read and conversational ASR. We analyze the factors influencing this disparity and the effect of speech mode-specific training on ASR accuracy. Method: Recordings of read and conversational speech from 27 individuals with various speech disorders were analyzed using both (a) one speaker-independent ASR system trained and optimized for typical speech and (b) multiple ASR models that were personalized to the speech of the participants with disordered speech. Word error rates were calculated for each speech model, read versus conversational, and subject. Linear mixed-effects models were used to assess the impact of speech mode and disorder severity on ASR accuracy. We investigated nine variables, classified as technical, linguistic, or speech impairment factors, for their potential influence on the performance gap. Results: We found a significant performance gap between read and conversational speech in both personalized and unadapted ASR models. Speech impairment severity notably impacted recognition accuracy in unadapted models for both speech modes and in personalized models for read speech. Linguistic attributes of utterances were the most influential on accuracy, though atypical speech characteristics also played a role. Including conversational speech samples in model training notably improved recognition accuracy. Conclusions: We observed a significant performance gap in ASR accuracy between read and conversational speech for individuals with speech disorders. This gap was largely due to the linguistic complexity and unique characteristics of speech disorders in conversational speech. Training personalized ASR models using conversational speech significantly improved recognition accuracy, demonstrating the importance of domain-specific training and highlighting the need for further research into ASR systems capable of handling disordered conversational speech effectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Community-Supported Shared Infrastructure in Support of Speech Accessibility.
- Author
-
Hasegawa-Johnson, Mark, Xiuwen Zheng, Heejin Kim, Mendes, Clarion, Dickinson, Meg, Hege, Erik, Zwilling, Chris, Moore Channell, Marie, Mattie, Laura, Hodges, Heather, Ramig, Lorraine, Bellard, Mary, Shebanek, Mike, Sari, Leda, Kalgaonkar, Kaustubh, Frerichs, David, Bigham, Jeffrey P., Findlater, Leah, Lea, Colin, and Herrlinger, Sarah
- Subjects
- *
COMMUNITY support , *HEALTH services accessibility , *AUTOMATIC speech recognition , *DYSARTHRIA , *CELL phones , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PARKINSON'S disease , *ASSISTIVE technology , *SPEECH disorders , *MACHINE learning , *PERSONAL computers , *DATA analysis software , *PEOPLE with disabilities - Abstract
Purpose: The Speech Accessibility Project (SAP) intends to facilitate research and development in automatic speech recognition (ASR) and other machine learning tasks for people with speech disabilities. The purpose of this article is to introduce this project as a resource for researchers, including baseline analysis of the first released data package. Method: The project aims to facilitate ASR research by collecting, curating, and distributing transcribed U.S. English speech from people with speech and/or language disabilities. Participants record speech from their place of residence by connecting their personal computer, cell phone, and assistive devices, if needed, to the SAP web portal. All samples are manually transcribed, and 30 per participant are annotated using differential diagnostic pattern dimensions. For purposes of ASR experiments, the participants have been randomly assigned to a training set, a development set for controlled testing of a trained ASR, and a test set to evaluate ASR error rate. Results: The SAP 2023-10-05 Data Package contains the speech of 211 people with dysarthria as a correlate of Parkinson's disease, and the associated test set contains 42 additional speakers. A baseline ASR, with a word error rate of 3.4% for typical speakers, transcribes test speech with a word error rate of 36.3%. Fine-tuning reduces the word error rate to 23.7%. Conclusions: Preliminary findings suggest that a large corpus of dysarthric and dysphonic speech has the potential to significantly improve speech technology for people with disabilities. By providing these data to researchers, the SAP intends to significantly accelerate research into accessible speech technology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. When No Speech Norms Exist: Observations From Sinhala.
- Author
-
Hettiarachchi, Shyamani, Ranaweera, Mahishi, Saleem, Shakeela, and Krishnaveni, Kanagendran
- Subjects
- *
VOWELS , *QUALITATIVE research , *PHONOLOGICAL awareness , *CONSONANTS , *AGE distribution , *VERBAL behavior testing , *PHOTOGRAPHY , *QUANTITATIVE research , *JUDGMENT sampling , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LINGUISTICS , *TAMIL (Indic people) , *SPEECH evaluation , *RESEARCH , *PHONETICS , *SPEECH disorders , *COMPARATIVE studies , *ENGLISH language , *SPEECH therapy , *ARTICULATION (Speech) , *CHILDREN ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Purpose: A well-established set of language-specific norms for phonological development is imperative in the assessment of child speech sound difficulties. Currently, English norms are used clinically (in the absence of norms for local languages) to determine if a child displays age-appropriate, delayed or disordered speech patterns in Sinhala. This preliminary exploratory study aimed to document phonological processes observed in typically developing Sinhalaspeaking children aged 3;0–6;11 (years;months). Method: The Test of Articulation and Phonology–Sinhala, a picture-based assessment, was devised by the researchers and administered to 102 Sinhalaspeaking children from three geographical locations (Colombo, Kandy, and Gampaha). The quantitative measures included percent consonants correct, percent vowels correct, and percent phonemes correct, while the qualitative analysis identified phonological processes. Results: The quantitative results showed a marked influence of age on phoneme production accuracy with over 75% consonants correct by 3 years 6 months. The qualitative findings demonstrate common typical phonological processes and less common phonological processes in Sinhala compared to the speech pathology and cross-linguistic literature. Common phonological processes included fronting, stopping, and weak syllable deletion widely documented in linguistic and speech-language pathology literature. Many shared phonological processes were observed between Sinhala and Sri Lankan Tamil, the two main local languages, including fronting of retroflex sounds and lateralization. The phonological process of denasalization of prenasalized stops was observed in Sinhala, with no documentation of the phonological process found within the mainstream speech-language pathology literature. Conclusion and Implications: These findings reinforce the need to document and use language-specific typical phonological processes in Sinhala given the implications for early and accurate identification of speech difficulties and intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Toward Process-Oriented, Dimensional Approaches for Diagnosis and Treatment of Speech Sound Disorders in Children: Position Statement and Future Perspectives.
- Author
-
Maassen, Ben and Terband, Hayo
- Subjects
- *
SPEECH therapy , *MOTOR ability , *INFANT development , *SENSORIMOTOR integration , *NEUROPHYSIOLOGY , *SPEECH evaluation , *CAUSALITY (Physics) , *LANGUAGE disorders , *CHILD development , *SPEECH disorders , *PHONETICS , *CHILDREN ,SPEECH disorder diagnosis - Abstract
Background: Children with speech sound disorders (SSD) form a heterogeneous group, with respect to severity, etiology, proximal causes, speech error characteristics, and response to treatment. Infants develop speech and language in interaction with neurological maturation and general perceptual, motoric, and cognitive skills in a social-emotional context. Purpose: After a brief introduction into psycholinguistic models of speech production and levels of causation, in this review article, we present an in-depth overview of mechanisms and processes, and the dynamics thereof, which are crucial in typical speech development. These basic mechanisms and processes are: (a) neurophysiological motor refinement, that is, the maturational articulatory mechanisms that drive babbling and the more differentiated production of larger speech patterns; (b) sensorimotor integration, which forms the steering function from phonetics to phonology; and (c) motor hierarchy and articulatory phonology describing the gestural organization of syllables, which underlie fluent speech production. These dynamics have consequences for the diagnosis and further analysis of SSD in children. We argue that current diagnostic classification systems do not do justice to the multilevel, multifactorial, and interactive character of the underlying mechanisms and processes. This is illustrated by a recent Dutch study yielding distinct performance profiles among children with SSD, which allows for a dimensional interpretation of underlying processing deficits. Conclusions: Analyses of mainstream treatments with respect to the treatment goals and the speech mechanisms addressed show that treatment programs are quite transparent in their aims and approach and how they contribute to remediating specific deficits or mechanisms. Recent studies into clinical reasoning reveal that the clinical challenge for speech-language pathologists is how to select the most appropriate treatment at the most appropriate time for each individual child with SSD. We argue that a process-oriented approach has merits as compared to categorical diagnostics as a toolbox to aid in the interpretation of the speech profile in terms of underlying deficits and to connect these to a specific intervention approach and treatment target. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Predictors of Functional Communication Outcomes in Children With Idiopathic Motor Speech Disorders.
- Author
-
Namasivayam, Aravind K., Hyunji Shin, Nisenbaum, Rosane, Pukonen, Margit, and van Lieshout, Pascal
- Subjects
- *
T-test (Statistics) , *FACILITATED communication , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *FISHER exact test , *INTELLIGIBILITY of speech , *MOVEMENT disorders , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MANN Whitney U Test , *CHI-squared test , *APRAXIA , *ODDS ratio , *COMMUNICATIVE disorders , *COMMUNICATION , *SPEECH disorders , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *SPEECH therapy , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of the study was to investigate child- and interventionlevel factors that predict improvements in functional communication outcomes in children with motor-based speech sound disorders. Method: Eighty-five preschool-age children with childhood apraxia of speech (n = 37) and speech motor delay (n = 48) participated. Multivariable logistic regression models estimated odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals for the association between minimal clinically important difference in the Focus on the Outcomes of Communication Under Six scores and multiple child-level (e.g., age, sex, speech intelligibility, Kaufman Speech Praxis Test diagnostic rating scale) and intervention-level predictors (dose frequency and home practice duration). Results: Overall, 65% of participants demonstrated minimal clinically important difference changes in the functional communication outcomes. Kaufman Speech Praxis Test rating scale was significantly associated with higher odds of noticeable change in functional communication outcomes in children. There is some evidence that delivering the intervention for 2 times per week for 10 weeks provides benefit. Conclusion: A rating scale based on task complexity has the potential for serving as a screening tool to triage children for intervention from waitlist and/or determining service delivery for this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Preface to the Special Issue: Select Papers From the 8th International Conference on Speech Motor Control.
- Author
-
Maassen, Ben A. M. and Terband, Hayo
- Subjects
- *
MOTOR ability , *BIOMECHANICS , *FACILITATED communication , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *STUTTERING , *NEUROLOGICAL disorders , *SPEECH evaluation , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *SPEECH disorders , *MACHINE learning , *SPEECH therapy ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech - Abstract
A preface to the special issue of the "Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research," that includes select papers from the Eighth International Conference on Speech Motor Control, is presented.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Acoustic Analysis of Spatiotemporal Variability in Children With Childhood Apraxia of Speech.
- Author
-
Vuolo, Janet and Wisler, Alan
- Subjects
- *
T-test (Statistics) , *RESEARCH funding , *KINEMATICS , *SPEECH evaluation , *SPEECH disorders , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SPEECH apraxia , *REGRESSION analysis , *CHILDREN ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to investigate acoustic spatiotemporal variability in children with childhood apraxia of speech (CAS) compared to children with typical development (TD). Increased spatiotemporal variability in children with CAS relative to nonapraxic peers has been documented in multiple kinematic studies. To date, few studies have investigated spatiotemporal variability in CAS using an acoustic signal. Method: Data were drawn from 10 children with CAS and 10 children with TD, ranging in age from 5;0 to 11;2 (years;months), who participated in an online study. All children with CAS had a verified diagnosis and showed at least five CAS features across at least two tasks, independently confirmed by two speech-language pathologists with expertise in CAS. Children repeated the sentences "Buy Bobby a puppy" (BBAP) and "Mom pets the puppy" (MPP) 10 times each. The acoustic spatiotemporal index (STI), calculated from the amplitude envelope, was used to investigate acoustic spatiotemporal variability. Using a regression analysis, we analyzed group differences in STI values while controlling for age and gender. Results: Children with CAS did not produce enough usable tokens of BBAP to analyze. MPP revealed significantly higher acoustic STI values in children with CAS compared to children with TD. No significant effects were observed for age or gender. Acoustic data collected online without the use of specialized equipment yielded high-quality audio data from which amplitude envelope tracing could be reliably accomplished. Conclusions: This study adds to a growing body of empirical data indicating that children with CAS produce speech with more variable spatiotemporal control compared to children with TD. In addition to producing more variable speech, children with CAS were less consistently able to form productions free of phonetic errors. These findings also demonstrate the feasibility of using remote data collection to investigate acoustic spatiotemporal variability, which allows for the recruitment of larger samples of low-incidence populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Preliminary Speech Perception Performance Profiles of School-Age Children With Childhood Apraxia of Speech, Speech Sound Disorder, and Typical Development.
- Author
-
Hitchcock, Elaine R., Swartz, Michelle T., and Cabbage, Kathryn L.
- Subjects
- *
VOWELS , *MEDICAL logic , *SOUND , *CONSONANTS , *KRUSKAL-Wallis Test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *STUTTERING , *CHILD development , *ONE-way analysis of variance , *SPEECH disorders , *SPEECH perception , *COMPARATIVE studies , *PHONETICS , *SPEECH apraxia , *NONPARAMETRIC statistics , *GROUP process , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Purpose: Limited research exists assessing speech perception in school-age children with speech sound disorder (SSD) and childhood apraxia of speech (CAS); despite early evidence that speech perception may lead to error-prone motor planning/programming. In this study, we examine speech perception performance in school-age children with and without speech production deficits. Method: Speech perception was assessed using the Wide Range Acoustic Accuracy Scale to determine the just-noticeable difference in discrimination for three consonant-vowel syllable contrasts (/bɑ/-/wɑ/, /dɑ/-/gɑ/, /ɹɑ/-/wɑ/), each varying along a single acoustic parameter for seven children with CAS with rhotic errors, seven children with SSD with rhotic errors, and seven typically developing (TD) children. Results: Findings revealed statistically significant mean differences between perceptual performance of children with CAS when compared to TD children for discrimination of /ɹɑ/-/wɑ/ contrasts. Large effect sizes were also observed for comparisons of /ɹɑ/-/wɑ/ contrasts between children with CAS, SSD, and TD peers. Additionally, large effect sizes were observed for /dɑ/-/gɑ/ contrasts between children with CAS and SSD and TD children despite nonsignificant mean differences in group performance. Conclusions: Overall, mean outcome scores suggest that school-age children with CAS and persistent rhotic errors demonstrated less accurate speech perception skills relative to TD children for the /ɹɑ/-/wɑ/ contrasts. However, the relatively small sample sizes per group limit the extent to which these findings may be generalized to the broader population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Virtual Post-Intervention Speech and Language Assessment of Toddler and Preschool Participants in Babble Boot Camp.
- Author
-
Potter, Nancy L., VanDam, Mark, Bruce, Laurel, Davis, Jenny, Eng, Linda, Finestack, Lizbeth, Heinlen, Victoria, Scherer, Nancy, Schrock, Claire, Seltzer, Ryan, Stoel-Gammon, Carol, Thompson, Lauren, and Peter, Beate
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION of parents , *PARENTS , *MOTOR ability , *RESEARCH funding , *SENSORIMOTOR integration , *STATISTICAL sampling , *PILOT projects , *PROBABILITY theory , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *MANN Whitney U Test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *TELEMEDICINE , *GALACTOSEMIA , *SPEECH evaluation , *CHILD development , *VOCABULARY , *PHONETICS , *SPEECH disorders , *PATIENT aftercare , *SPEECH therapy , *MEDICAL referrals , *SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Purpose: Babble Boot Camp (BBC) is a parent-implemented telepractice intervention for infants at risk for speech and language disorders. BBC uses a teach-model-coach-review approach, delivered through weekly 15-min virtual meetings with a speech-language pathologist. We discuss accommodations needed for successful virtual follow-up test administration and preliminary assessment outcomes for children with classic galactosemia (CG) and controls at age 2.5 years. Method: This clinical trial included 54 participants, 16 children with CG receiving BBC speech-language intervention from infancy, age 2 years, five children receiving sensorimotor intervention from infancy and changing to speech-language intervention at 15 months until 2 years of age, seven controls with CG, and 26 typically developing controls. The participants' language and articulation were assessed via telehealth at age 2.5 years. Results: The Preschool Language Scale-Fifth Edition (PLS-5) was successfully administered with specific parent instruction and manipulatives assembled from the child's home. The GFTA-3 was successfully administered to all but three children who did not complete this assessment due to limited expressive vocabularies. Referrals for continued speech therapy based on PLS-5 and GFTA-3 scores were made for 16% of children who received BBC intervention from infancy as compared to 40% and 57% of children who began BBC at 15 months of age or did not receive BBC intervention, respectively. Conclusions: With extended time and accommodations from the standardized administration guidelines, virtual assessment of speech and language was possible. However, given the inherent challenges of testing very young children virtually, in-person assessment is recommended, when possible, for outcome measurements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Stuttering Impact and Patient Trust in Indian Health Care: A Cross-Sectional Study.
- Author
-
Mallipeddi, Nathan V., Aulov, Sivan, and Perez, Hector R.
- Subjects
- *
CROSS-sectional method , *HEALTH services accessibility , *THERAPEUTICS , *ATTITUDES toward illness , *MEDICAL quality control , *RESEARCH funding , *MEDICAL care , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *STATISTICAL sampling , *QUANTITATIVE research , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *TRUST , *SPEECH disorders , *PATIENT satisfaction - Abstract
Purpose: This study aims to determine the relationship between (a) stuttering impact and trust in the health care system and (b) stuttering impact and trust in physicians among persons who stutter in India. Method: This quantitative study utilized cross-sectional electronic surveys to assess the experiences of 118 adults who stutter in India. The surveys queried (a) stuttering impact, (b) trust in the health care system, and (c) trust in physicians. Results: Stuttering impact is strongly negatively associated with trust in the health care system (r = -.940, p = .0001, R2 = .885) and strongly negatively associated with trust in physicians (r = -.941, p = .0001, R2 = .885). Controlling for age, gender, and income does not affect these relationships. Conclusions: The strongly significant associations found in this study between stuttering impact and trust call attention to how interrelated stuttering experiences are with trust in health care. Speech-language pathologists around the globe may wish to discuss how stuttering might affect health care experiences with their clients who stutter to build rapport, to advocate for people who stutter, and to better support their health professional colleagues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Four Cases of Children With Phonological Impairment and Precocious Vocabulary: Making Sense of a Clinical Conundrum.
- Author
-
Hearnshaw, Stephanie, Baker, Elise, Pomper, Ron, McGregor, Karla K., Edwards, Jan, and Munroa, Natalie
- Subjects
- *
ARTICULATION disorders , *SPEECH evaluation , *SPEECH perception , *VOCABULARY , *SPEECH disorders , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to describe the speech production, speech perception, vocabulary, and word learning abilities of lexically precocious 4-year-old children with phonological impairment, in an effort to better understand the underlying nature of phonological impairment in children. Method: Using a case series approach, we identified four children with phonological impairment and precocious vocabulary abilities. Each child completed routine speech production and vocabulary assessments, as well as experimental speech perception and word learning tasks. The results from these tasks were then used to create profiles of each child's individual strengths and needs across the abilities assessed. Results: Although all four children presented with phonological impairment and lexically precocious receptive and expressive vocabulary, they differed in their specific speech errors. One child presented with phonological speech errors only, while the other three children presented with an interdental lisp alongside their phonological errors. Three children presented with average speech perception abilities, and one child presented with poorer speech perception. The same three children also showed some learning of novel nonwords 1 week post-initial exposure, while the other child showed no evidence of word learning 1 week post-initial exposure. Conclusions: The clinical profiles of lexically precocious children with phonological impairment offered different insights into the nature of the problem. Although one child appeared to present with underspecified underlying representations of words, the other three children appeared to present with wellspecified underlying representations. Of the three children with well-specified underlying representations, two appeared to have difficulty abstracting particular rules of the ambient phonological system. Further research is needed to improve our understanding of the underlying nature of phonological impairment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Articulation Assessment for Tongue Cancer Patients: Using Consonant Production Performance to Capture Speech Deficits.
- Author
-
Tongtong Xie, Yi Li, Yudong Xiao, Huayong Zheng, Guiqing Liao, and Shuo Lu
- Subjects
- *
ARTICULATION disorders , *T-test (Statistics) , *RESEARCH funding , *CANCER patients , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *COMMUNICATION , *ONE-way analysis of variance , *SPEECH disorders , *DATA analysis software ,RESEARCH evaluation ,TONGUE tumors - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to thoroughly analyze postoperative consonant errors by tongue cancer (TC) patients with speech disorders and also to investigate the correlation between the pathological factors and the speech performance using our Consonant-based Articulation Assessment Battery (CAAB). Method: The participants were 57 monolingual Mandarin TC patients (26 women, 31 men) after surgery (aged 20-80 years). All participants were literate and had normal vision and hearing, enabling them to comprehend and comply with our instructions. In order to quickly evaluate their articulation performance based on the place and manner of articulation, they were instructed to pronounce the characters in CAAB. The analysis removed speech samples impacted by speakers' dialects, while recording and documenting all other responses. Results: The study uncovered a significant correlation between pathological factors (e.g., size of tongue resection, specific resection site, and tumor size) and the accuracy of consonant articulation. Furthermore, tongue damage predominantly impacts the place of articulation (63.85%) than the manner of articulation (20.78%). The damage in the anterior part of the tongue has the most prominent influence on consonant production. Conclusions: CAAB can fast capture the idiosyncratic characteristics of speech production by TC patients, and the articulation deficits are quite different from other types of organic or nonorganic speech disorders, for example, cleft lip and cleft palate. Hence, CAAB can be designated as an assessment tool for articulation disorders caused by stomatognathic damages. Our findings also shed light on the possible oral cancer surgery plan and the postoperative speech rehabilitation training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Beyond Sounds: Decoding Speech Errors and Phonological Awareness in Preschoolers.
- Author
-
Brosseau-Lapréa, Françoise and Roepke, Elizabeth
- Subjects
SOUND ,PHONOLOGICAL awareness ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,CONSONANTS ,ABILITY ,SPEECH evaluation ,SPEECH disorders ,CASE studies ,TRAINING ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this clinical focus article is to describe the phonological awareness (PA) skills of children with speech sound disorders (SSD) and the relationships between types of speech errors and strengths and weaknesses in PA. Method: Through three case studies, we demonstrate the heterogeneous speech and preliteracy skills of preschoolers with SSD. Results: Children who produce more atypical and omission errors are more likely to present with PA deficits. However, some children who produce mostly substitution errors nonetheless present with weaknesses in PA, as do many children with resolved speech production difficulties. Conclusions: The high prevalence of PA difficulties in children with SSD, or in children who presented with SSD at a younger age, provides an important opportunity for speech-language pathologists to assess preliteracy skills and provide targeted intervention for phonological processing needs to facilitate later literacy acquisition. Guidelines for assessing preschoolers with SSD are provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Spanish-Speaking Mothers’ Experiences of School-Based Speech Therapy.
- Author
-
Irizarry-Pérez, Carlos D., Bell, Lindsey M., Rodriguez, Monique N., and Viramontes, Vanessa
- Subjects
- *
QUALITATIVE research , *INTERVIEWING , *CULTURE , *PHONOLOGICAL awareness , *FAMILY relations , *EXPERIENCE , *THEMATIC analysis , *FAMILY attitudes , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *SPANISH language , *RESEARCH methodology , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *PHENOMENOLOGY , *ENGLISH language , *SPEECH disorders , *SPEECH therapy , *SCHOOL health services , *COVID-19 pandemic ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Purpose: Spanish-speaking families are a growing population that speech-language pathologists must be prepared to work with. To provide culturally responsive intervention, speech-language pathologists (SLPs) must understand the perspectives of Spanish-speaking caregivers when providing intervention. These values and experiences may differ from those of monolingual, mainstream culture. Understanding the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on these experiences is also important. In this qualitative study, we explore the experiences of Spanish-speaking mothers whose children have received school-based speech-language intervention and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Method: We interviewed five Spanish-speaking mothers who were identified as having bilingual children who had or were currently receiving speech therapy, all through the public school system. The mothers participated in a semistructured interview to share their experiences with their children receiving intervention. We analyzed the transcripts through interpretative phenomenological analysis to identify salient themes among participants. All research team members reviewed and agreed upon themes to ensure credibility. Results: The findings revealed six group experiential themes: (a) lack of services and frustration with and barriers to accessing services, (b) greater improvements in English compared with Spanish, (c) bilingual speech therapy has positive effects on children and Spanish-speaking mothers, (d) family involvement in speech therapy is highly important, (e) family stress related to speech difficulties, and (f) pandemic negatively impacted children’s socialization and learning. Discussion: The results are discussed in the context of equity. Through understanding the experiences of Spanish-speaking mothers, SLPs can work to ensure service levels comparable with those of monolingual children and support bilingual acquisition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Sentence Production and Sentence Repetition in Autistic Adolescents and Young Adults: Linguistic Sensitivity to Finiteness Marking.
- Author
-
Girolamo, Teresa, Ghali, Samantha, and Larson, Caroline
- Subjects
- *
PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *T-test (Statistics) , *RESEARCH funding , *AUTISM , *PHONOLOGICAL awareness , *FISHER exact test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LANGUAGE disorders , *SPEECH disorders , *DIETHYLSTILBESTROL , *REGRESSION analysis , *ADOLESCENCE , *ADULTS - Abstract
Purpose: Despite the clinical utility of sentence production and sentence repetition to identify language impairment in autism, little is known about the extent to which these tasks are sensitive to potential language variation. One promising method is strategic scoring, which has good clinical utility for identifying language impairment in nonautistic school-age children across variants of English. This report applies strategic scoring to analyze sentence repetition and sentence production in autistic adolescents and adults. Method: Thirty-one diverse autistic adolescents and adults with language impairment (ALI; n = 15) and without language impairment (ASD; n = 16) completed the Formulated Sentences and Recalling Sentences subtests of the Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals–Fifth Edition. Descriptive analyses and regression evaluated effects of scoring condition, group, and scoring condition by group on outcomes, as well as group differences in finiteness marking across utterances and morphosyntactic structures. Results: Strategic and unmodified item-level scores were essentially constant on both subtests and significantly lower in the ALI than the ASD group. Only group predicted item-level scores. Group differences were limited to: percent grammatical utterances on Formulated Sentences and percent production of overt structures combined on Sentence Repetition (ALI < ASD). Discussion: Findings support the feasibility of strategic scoring for sentence production and sentence repetition to identify language impairment and indicate that potential language variation in finiteness marking did not confound outcomes in this sample. To better understand the clinical utility of strategic scoring, replication with a larger sample varying in age and comparisons with dialect-sensitive measures are needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Clinical Insights Into the Use of Speech Amplification Devices for Managing Hypophonia: Interviews With Speech-Language Pathologists.
- Author
-
Gates, Kelly, Knowles, Thea, Mach, Helen, and Higginbotham, Jeff
- Subjects
- *
COGNITION disorders treatment , *VOICE disorder treatment , *SPEECH therapists , *DISABILITIES , *FACILITATED communication , *QUALITATIVE research , *DYSARTHRIA , *INTERVIEWING , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *PARKINSON'S disease , *DECISION making in clinical medicine , *WORK experience (Employment) , *DECISION making , *THEMATIC analysis , *PATIENT-centered care , *COMMERCIAL product evaluation , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *RESEARCH methodology , *COMMUNICATION , *NEEDS assessment , *SPEECH disorders , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this qualitative interview study was to identify themes regarding considerations in the usage of speech amplification device usage for people with Parkinson's disease (PD) and hypophonia from the perspective of speech-language pathologists (SLPs). Method: Eligible participants included SLPs currently practicing in the United States or Canada with experience working with clients with PD for at least 2 years. Ten SLPs participated in 60-min interviews conducted via Zoom. A semistructured interview guide was created prior to the interviews. The interviews were transcribed following their completion, and an iterative coding process was used to identify themes using thematic analysis. Results: Three main themes were identified from the interviews. The first theme encapsulated how clinicians described amplification devices as a potential treatment tool, which highlighted the nuances that may impact selecting an amplification device as a treatment option such as increased hypophonia or dysarthria severity and cognitive decline. The second theme highlighted how device selection depends on the individual needs of the user. Individual client characteristics (such as disease symptoms and individual needs and preferences) may impact the choice of amplification device. The last theme outlined the importance of involving family members in all stages of device use and involving other health care team members on a case-by-case basis. Conclusions: The insights provided by the SLP participants help to understand the clinical decisions that are made when determining device candidacy, selecting a device, and evaluating device success. These insights can be used to improve research studies of augmentative management of hypophonia and guide more personalized management decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Effects of an Augmentative and Alternative Communication Intervention Package on Socio-Communicative Behaviors Between Minimally Speaking Autistic Children and Their Peers.
- Author
-
Chavers Edgar, Tiffany, Schlosser, Ralf, and Koul, Rajinder
- Subjects
- *
FACILITATED communication , *RESEARCH funding , *AUTISM , *AFFINITY groups , *TEACHING methods , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SOCIAL skills , *COMMUNICATION , *ABILITY , *SPEECH disorders , *VISUAL perception , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *SPEECH therapy , *CHILD behavior , *TRAINING , *CHILDREN ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to investigate the effectiveness of an augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) intervention package consisting of systematic instruction and aided modeling with speech-output technologies on the acquisition, maintenance, and generalization of socio-communicative behaviors--initiating a request for a turn, answering questions, and commenting--in four, minimally speaking (MS) autistic children between the ages of 6 and 9 years. Method: A multiple--probe design across behaviors replicated across participants was implemented to evaluate the effects of systematic instruction and aided modeling on initiating requests for a turn, answering questions, and commenting behaviors. Additionally, a pre- and posttreatment multiple-generalization-probes design was used to assess generalization across peers. Results: Visual analyses demonstrated experimental control for two participants (i.e., Derek, Ajay) showing a functional relationship between the intervention and outcomes across all social communicative behavior. For one participant (i.e., Matthew), experimental control could not be established because he did not reach the learning criterion for commenting. The fourth participant (i.e., John) transferred to a different school after making some progress on requesting. Effect size indicator analyses corroborated these findings, indicating medium-to-strong effects for initiating requests for a turn strong effects for answering questions, and medium-to-strong effects for commenting. Generalization of socio-communicative behaviors from researcher to a typically developing peer was variable across participants. Participants maintained socio-communicative behaviors 3 weeks after the last intervention session with varying degrees of success. Conclusion: The outcomes of this study suggest that aided modeling and systematic instruction using speech-output technologies may lead to gains in socio-communicative behaviors in some MS autistic children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Parent and Child Experiences of Bone-Conduction Hearing Devices for Unilateral Microtia--Atresia: Decisions and Outcomes.
- Author
-
Edwards, Lindsey, Middleton-Curran, Laura, Wright, Gillian, Rooney, Natasha, Wong, Anita, Hill, Rebecca, Bulstrode, Neil, and Nash, Robert
- Subjects
EXTERNAL ear abnormalities ,TREATMENT of hearing disorders ,EXTERNAL ear ,AUDITORY perception testing ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,BONE conduction ,PSYCHOLOGY of children with disabilities ,RESEARCH funding ,FOCUS groups ,ACADEMIC accommodations ,PATIENT safety ,HEARING aids ,PATIENT-family relations ,INTERVIEWING ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,FATIGUE (Physiology) ,EXECUTIVE function ,PRODUCT design ,RESPONSIBILITY ,PARENT attitudes ,DECISION making ,LISTENING ,LEARNING ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PARENTING ,EMOTIONS ,ATTENTION ,THEMATIC analysis ,QUALITY of life ,RESEARCH methodology ,BULLYING ,PARENTS of children with disabilities ,PATIENT decision making ,AUDITORY perception ,SHORT-term memory ,HEARING disorders ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,SPEECH disorders ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,THOUGHT & thinking ,WELL-being ,INFORMATION-seeking behavior ,TIME ,COGNITION ,FRIENDSHIP ,ADOLESCENCE ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Purpose: The decision to proceed with bone-conduction hearing devices is not an easy one despite being the audiological management of choice for the majority of children with unilateral hearing loss secondary to microtia--atresia, and the outcome is not always as hoped for. This study aimed to explore parent and child views on decision making and outcomes. Method: Qualitative methods (focus groups and individual interviews) were used to explore parent and child opinions on factors influencing the decision to try a bone-conduction device and their subsequent use or nonuse. Quantitative methods (questionnaires) investigated the impact of hearing loss on listening effort and fatigue, quality of life, and learning, including executive functions such as working memory, information processing, and attention. Twelve parent--child dyads participated in the study, with children aged 9-14 years. Results: A thematic analysis of qualitative data highlighted the importance to parents of timely, consistent, and accessible device information as well as concerns regarding bullying, psychosocial well-being, and educational impacts. Children's concerns included feeling different from their peers, bullying, device appearance, and sound quality, as well as the support they wanted and received. Questionnaire results provided useful confirmatory information on the impacts of unilateral hearing loss on learning for a substantial proportion of the children in this sample. Conclusion: The findings provide insights into the wide range of issues that have implications for the provision of audiological services as well as educational and psychological support for children with unilateral microtia--atresia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The Feel of Speech: Multisystem and Polymodal Somatosensation in Speech Production.
- Author
-
Kent, Raymond D.
- Subjects
- *
TONGUE physiology , *PHARYNX physiology , *LARYNGEAL physiology , *MOTOR ability , *FACIAL muscles , *NOCICEPTORS , *SPEECH , *PROPRIOCEPTION , *SENSORY stimulation , *CHEMORECEPTORS , *PSYCHOPHYSICS , *TOUCH , *NEURAL pathways , *PALATE , *NEUROSCIENCES , *NEUROANATOMY , *SENSORY neurons , *THERMORECEPTORS , *FACIAL nerve , *AGING , *RESPIRATORY organ physiology , *BARORECEPTORS , *SPEECH disorders , *LIPS , *INNERVATION - Abstract
Purpose: The oral structures such as the tongue and lips have remarkable somatosensory capacities, but understanding the roles of somatosensation in speech production requires a more comprehensive knowledge of somatosensation in the speech production system in its entirety, including the respiratory, laryngeal, and supralaryngeal subsystems. This review was conducted to summarize the system-wide somatosensory information available for speech production. Method: The search was conducted with PubMed/Medline and Google Scholar for articles published until November 2023. Numerous search terms were used in conducting the review, which covered the topics of psychophysics, basic and clinical behavioral research, neuroanatomy, and neuroscience. Results and Conclusions: The current understanding of speech somatosensation rests primarily on the two pillars of psychophysics and neuroscience. The confluence of polymodal afferent streams supports the development, maintenance, and refinement of speech production. Receptors are both canonical and noncanonical, with the latter occurring especially in the muscles innervated by the facial nerve. Somatosensory representation in the cortex is disproportionately large and provides for sensory interactions. Speech somatosensory function is robust over the lifespan, with possible declines in advanced aging. The understanding of somatosensation in speech disorders is largely disconnected from research and theory on speech production. A speech somatoscape is proposed as the generalized, system-wide sensation of speech production, with implications for speech development, speech motor control, and speech disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Language-Independent Acoustic Biomarkers for Quantifying Speech Impairment in Huntington’s Disease.
- Author
-
Fahed, Vitória S., Doheny, Emer P., Collazo, Carla, Krzysztofik, Joanna, Mann, Elliot, Morgan-Jones, Philippa, Mills, Laura, Drew, Cheney, Rosser, Anne E., Cousins, Rebecca, Witkowski, Grzegorz, Cubo, Esther, Busse, Monica, and Lowery, Madeleine M.
- Subjects
- *
VOWELS , *READING , *SMARTPHONES , *DYSARTHRIA , *RESEARCH funding , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *FISHER exact test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MULTILINGUALISM , *SPEECH evaluation , *SPANISH language , *ANALYSIS of variance , *SPEECH disorders , *FACTOR analysis , *ENGLISH language , *HUNTINGTON disease , *BIOMARKERS ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech - Abstract
Purpose: Changes in voice and speech are characteristic symptoms of Huntington’s disease (HD). Objective methods for quantifying speech impairment that can be used across languages could facilitate assessment of disease progression and intervention strategies. The aim of this study was to analyze acoustic features to identify language-independent features that could be used to quantify speech dysfunction in English-, Spanish-, and Polish-speaking participants with HD. Method: Ninety participants with HD and 83 control participants performed sustained vowel, syllable repetition, and reading passage tasks recorded with previously validated methods using mobile devices. Language-independent features that differed between HD and controls were identified. Principal component analysis (PCA) and unsupervised clustering were applied to the language-independent features of the HD data set to identify subgroups within the HD data. Results: Forty-six language-independent acoustic features that were significantly different between control participants and participants with HD were identified. Following dimensionality reduction using PCA, four speech clusters were identified in the HD data set. Unified Huntington’s Disease Rating Scale (UHDRS) total motor score, total functional capacity, and composite UHDRS were significantly different for pairwise comparisons of subgroups. The percentage of HD participants with higher dysarthria score and disease stage also increased across clusters. Conclusion: The results support the application of acoustic features to objectively quantify speech impairment and disease severity in HD in multilanguage studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Leveraging Communication Partner Speech to Automate Augmented Input for Children on the Autism Spectrum Who Are Minimally Verbal: Prototype Development and Preliminary Efficacy Investigation.
- Author
-
Holyfield, Christine, MacNeil, Stephen, Caldwell, Nicolette, Zimmerman, Tara O’Neill, Lorah, Elizabeth, Dragut, Eduard, and Vucetic, Slobodan
- Subjects
- *
SPEECH , *FACILITATED communication , *DIFFUSION of innovations , *AUTISM , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *ATTENTION , *LINGUISTICS , *COMMUNICATION , *AUTOMATION , *SPEECH disorders , *INTER-observer reliability - Abstract
Purpose: Augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) technology innovation is urgently needed to improve outcomes for children on the autism spectrum who are minimally verbal. One potential technology innovation is applying artificial intelligence (AI) to automate strategies such as augmented input to increase language learning opportunities while mitigating communication partner time and learning barriers. Innovation in AAC research and design methodology is also needed to empirically explore this and other applications of AI to AAC. The purpose of this report was to describe (a) the development of an AAC prototype using a design methodology new to AAC research and (b) a preliminary investigation of the efficacy of this potential new AAC capability. Method: The prototype was developed using a Wizard-of-Oz prototyping approach that allows for initial exploration of a new technology capability without the time and effort required for full-scale development. The preliminary investigation with three children on the autism spectrum who were minimally verbal used an adapted alternating treatment design to compare the effects of a Wizard-of-Oz prototype that provided automated augmented input (i.e., pairing color photos with speech) to a standard topic display (i.e., a grid display with line drawings) on visual attention, linguistic participation, and (for one participant) word learning during a circle activity. Results: Preliminary investigation results were variable, but overall participants increased visual attention and linguistic participation when using the prototype. Conclusions: Wizard-of-Oz prototyping could be a valuable approach to spur much needed innovation in AAC. Further research into efficacy, reliability, validity, and attitudes is required to more comprehensively evaluate the use of AI to automate augmented input in AAC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Designing a Module on Stuttering and Cluttering: A Guide for Speech-Language Pathology Educators.
- Author
-
Connery, Amy and Ní Shé, Caitríona
- Subjects
- *
CURRICULUM , *HEALTH education teachers , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *CLINICAL competence , *COMMUNICATION , *SPEECH disorders , *SPEECH therapy , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *MEDICAL practice - Abstract
Purpose: Due to the scope of practice of speech-language pathology (SLP) expanding considerably in recent times, there is reduced emphasis on certain communication conditions within the curricula of SLP university programs. Stuttering and cluttering are neglected components of such curricula, despite the complex clinical skill set required to work with these client groups. Evaluation of the content and quality of modules on stuttering and cluttering is warranted to ensure that SLP students are graduating with adequate competence and confidence for supporting people with these conditions. This tutorial, based on a review of the literature, aims to provide guidance to educators who are designing or revising such modules. Method: The All Ireland Society for Higher Education (AISHE) model for module design provides a practical and theoretically underpinned guide to educators in higher education on the design of a new module or the review of an existing one. The model’s seven key components are discussed, and their application to a module on stuttering and cluttering is outlined. Results: The AISHE model provides a systematic and user-friendly approach to module design in SLP university programs. It supports educators who are designing a new module or revising a module currently being taught on stuttering and cluttering. Conclusions: Educators are encouraged to familiarize themselves with the seven components of the AISHE model and to use it as a tool to design or revise modules on stuttering and cluttering. This will ensure that SLP students are graduating with increased competence and confidence in working with these client groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Speech Science as the Foundation for Voice and Motor Speech Disorders.
- Author
-
McHenry, Monica A. and Grover, Vikas
- Subjects
PHARYNX physiology ,SPEECH therapists ,AUDIOVISUAL materials ,SPEECH ,DYSARTHRIA ,VOICE disorders ,HEALTH occupations students ,RESPIRATION ,SOFT palate ,SPEECH therapy education ,MOVEMENT disorders ,TEACHING methods ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech ,RESPIRATORY organ physiology ,SPEECH disorders ,HUMAN voice - Abstract
Purpose: Physiological concepts can be effectively taught in speech science. These will serve as the foundation for understanding the physiological changes associated with neurogenic and voice disorders. In this tutorial, relevant concepts are highlighted across the respiratory, phonatory, velopharyngeal, and articulatory systems. Student activities and illustrative videos are presented. The culminating activity is based on a speech sample of an individual with moderate flaccid--spastic dysarthria. Students relate the physiological changes associated with dysarthria to the acoustic outcomes. Conclusions: Although traditionally speech science focuses on acoustics, this tutorial provides guidance on shaping the class to highlight the physiology underlying the acoustics. In this manner, students more easily see the clinical relevance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Speech, Language, Hearing, and Otopathology Results From the International Smith--Magenis Syndrome Patient Registry.
- Author
-
Brennan, Christine, Smith, Mara Louise, Baiduc, Rachael R., and O'Connor, Liam
- Subjects
- *
OTITIS media , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *SMITH-Magenis syndrome , *REPORTING of diseases , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *LANGUAGE disorders , *COMMUNICATION , *ACQUISITION of data , *INFERENTIAL statistics , *MIDDLE ear ventilation , *SPEECH disorders , *HEARING disorders , *TEXT messages , *HUMAN voice , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Purpose: Smith--Magenis syndrome (SMS), a rare, genetically linked complex developmental disorder caused by a deletion or mutation within chromosome 17p11.2, is associated with delays in speech-language development, otopathology, and hearing loss, yet previous studies lack comprehensive descriptions of hearing and communication profiles. Here, analyses of patient registry data expand what is known about speech, language, hearing, and otopathology in SMS. Method: International speech-language and hearing registry survey data for 82 individuals with SMS were analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics. Hearing loss, history of otitis media and pressure equalization (PE) tubes, communication mode, expressive/receptive language, and vocal quality were analyzed for all subjects and subjects grouped by age. Statistical methods included descriptive statistics and Pearson's chi-square tests of independence to test for differences between age groups for each variable of interest. Association analyses included Pearson's correlations. Results: Hearing and otological analyses revealed that 35% of subjects had hearing loss, 66% had a history of otitis media, and 62% had received PE tubes. Speech-language analyses revealed that 60% of subjects communicated using speech, 79% began speaking words at/after 24 months of age, 92% combined words at/after 36 months, and 41% used sign language before speech. There was a significant association between the age that first words were spoken and the age that PE tubes were first placed. Communication strengths noted in more than 40% of subjects included social interest, humor, and memory for people, past events, and/or facts. Conclusions: Significant delays and impairment in speech-language were common, but the majority of those with SMS communicated using speech by age 6 years. Age was a significant factor for some aspects of hearing loss and communication. Neither hearing loss nor otitis media exacerbated language impairment. These results confirm and extend previous findings about the nature of speech, language, hearing, and otopathology in those with SMS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Characterizing Speech Errors Across Primary Progressive Apraxia of Speech Subtypes.
- Author
-
Tetzloff, Katerina A., Duffy, Joseph R., Clark, Heather M., Josephs, Keith A., Whitwell, Jennifer L., and Utianski, Rene L.
- Subjects
- *
PROGRESSIVE supranuclear palsy , *QUANTITATIVE research , *NEURODEGENERATION , *LONGITUDINAL method , *SPEECH evaluation , *SPEECH disorders , *PHONETICS , *STROKE , *SPEECH apraxia , *DISEASE progression , *REGRESSION analysis , *INTER-observer reliability ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech - Abstract
Purpose: Apraxia of speech (AOS) is a motor speech disorder affecting articulatory planning and speech programming. When AOS is the sole manifestation of neurodegeneration, it is termed primary progressive apraxia of speech (PPAOS). Recent work has shown that there are distinct PPAOS subtypes: phonetic, prosodic, and those that do not clearly align with either (mixed). PPAOS subtypes differ with respect to the predominating motor speech difficulties, as well as disease progression and underlying pathology. Because past studies have determined PPAOS subtype based on clinical impression, the goal of the present study was to quantitatively determine the distribution of speech error types across PPAOS sub-types in a word repetition task and to investigate how word complexity affects the type and number of speech errors across PPAOS subtypes. Method: Forty-five patients with PPAOS (13 phonetic, 23 prosodic, and nine mixed) and 45 healthy controls produced multiple repetitions of words that varied in phonetic complexity. Sound additions, deletions, and substitutions/distortions (phonetic errors) and within-word segmentations (prosodic errors) were calculated. Results: All three PPAOS groups produced significantly more errors than controls, but the total number of errors was comparable among subtypes. The phonetic group produced more phonetic-type errors compared to the prosodic group but comparable to the mixed group. The prosodic group produced more segmentations compared to the phonetic and mixed PPAOS groups. As word complexity increased, the total number of errors increased for PPAOS patients. The phonetic and prosodic groups were more likely to produce phonetic- and prosodic-type errors, respectively, as word complexity increased. Conclusions: This study provides novel quantitative data showing that PPAOS subtype can be supported by the type and distribution of speech errors in a word repetition task. This may facilitate earlier, more reliable differential diagnosis and aid in disease prognosis, as PPAOS subtypes have distinct disease trajectories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Relation of Speech-Language Profile and Communication Modality to Participation of Children With Cerebral Palsy.
- Author
-
Allison, Kristen M. and Doherty, Kayla M.
- Subjects
- *
COMMUNICATIVE competence , *CROSS-sectional method , *DATA analysis , *MOVEMENT disorders , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHILDREN with cerebral palsy , *CAREGIVERS , *LANGUAGE disorders , *STATISTICS , *SPEECH disorders , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DATA analysis software , *SOCIAL participation , *SPEECH therapy - Abstract
Purpose: This study aimed to examine the contribution of speech motor impairment (SMI), language impairment, and communication modality to communicative and overall participation outcomes in school-age children with cerebral palsy (CP). Method: Eighty-one caregivers of children with CP provided information about their child's speech and language skills, communication modality, and participation through a web-based survey. Caregiver responses to two validated scales were used to quantify children's communicative participation and overall participation. Children were classified into four speech-language profile groups and three communication modality groups for comparison, based on caregiver-reported information regarding their child's communication skills. Results: Children with CP who had co-occurring SMI and language impairment had significantly lower levels of communicative participation and involvement in activities overall, compared to children with SMI alone. Among children with SMI, augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) use was associated with greater overall frequency of participation and involvement in life activities. Conclusion: Children with CP who have both SMI and language impairment and those who are nonspeaking communicators should be prioritized early for communication interventions focused on maximizing participation, including consideration of AAC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Validity and Reliability Study of the Turkish Version of Focus on the Outcomes of Communication Under Six-34.
- Author
-
Atila-Çağlar, Nazmiye, Noyan-Erbaş, Ayşın, Tığrak, Arcan, and Özcebe, Esra
- Subjects
- *
EXPERIMENTAL design , *STUTTERING , *STATISTICS , *STATISTICAL reliability , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *RESEARCH methodology , *SPEECH disorders , *ONE-way analysis of variance , *MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *T-test (Statistics) , *COMMUNICATION , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DATA analysis , *LANGUAGE disorders , *CHILDREN ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Purpose: Speech and language disorders can negatively affect preschool children’s communicative participation skills. Focus on the Outcomes of Communication Under Six-34 (FOCUS-34) is a valid and reliable scale that evaluates communicative participation in preschool children with speech and language disorders. This study aimed to establish the Turkish version of FOCUS-34 (FOCUS-34-TR) and investigate its validity and reliability. Method: A total of 175 children with language disorders, speech sound disorders, and fluency disorders (aged 20-72 months) and their parents were included in the study. Parents were asked to complete the demographic information form, the FOCUS-34-TR scale, and the Ages and Stages Questionnaires: Social-Emotional (ASQ-SE) Turkish version. The construct validity, convergent and divergent validity, internal consistency, and test-retest reliability of the scale were investigated. Results: The FOCUS-34-TR had high values for internal consistency (α = .97) and test-retest reliability (r = .95). The correlations between the FOCUS-34-TR total score and its subscales were between .77 and .90. A moderately significant negative correlation was found between the FOCUS-34-TR scale and the ASQ-SE. Conclusion: The Turkish version of FOCUS-34 is a valid and reliable scale that can be used in clinics and for research purposes to evaluate the communicative participation skills of Turkish-speaking preschool children with speech and language disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Quantifying Articulatory Working Space in Individuals Surgically Treated for Oral Cancer With Electromagnetic Articulography.
- Author
-
Tienkamp, Thomas B., Rebernik, Teja, Halpern, Bence M., van Son, Rob J. J. H., Wieling, Martijn, Witjes, Max J. H., de Visscher, Sebastiaan A. H. J., and Abur, Defne
- Subjects
- *
STATISTICS , *MOUTH tumors , *JAW tumors , *RANGE of motion of joints , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *SPEECH disorders , *SELF-evaluation , *SPEECH evaluation , *HEAD & neck cancer , *SURGICAL complications , *TONGUE , *SURGERY , *PATIENTS , *CASE-control method , *ELECTROMAGNETISM , *RISK assessment , *CANCER patients , *VERBAL behavior testing , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *DATA analysis software , *DATA analysis , *KINEMATICS , *SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma , *JAWS , *ARTICULATION (Speech) , *DISEASE risk factors ,TONGUE tumors - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to quantify sentence-level articulatory kinematics in individuals treated for oral squamous cell carcinoma (ITOC) compared to control speakers while also assessing the effect of treatment site (jaw vs. tongue). Furthermore, this study aimed to assess the relation between articulatory-kinematic measures and self-reported speech problems. Method: Articulatory-kinematic data from the tongue tip, tongue back, and jaw were collected using electromagnetic articulography in nine Dutch ITOC and eight control speakers. To quantify articulatory kinematics, the two-dimensional articulatory working space (AWS; in mm² ), one-dimensional anteroposterior range of motion (AP-ROM; in mm), and superior-inferior range of motion (SIROM in mm) were calculated and examined. Self-reported speech problems were assessed with the Speech Handicap Index (SHI). Results: Compared to a sex-matched control group, ITOC showed significantly smaller AWS, AP-ROM, and SI-ROM for both the tongue tip and tongue back sensor, but no significant differences were observed for the jaw sensor. This pattern was found for both individuals treated for tongue and jaw tumors. Moderate nonsignificant correlations were found between the SHI and the AWS of the tongue back and jaw sensors. Conclusions: Despite large individual variation, ITOC showed reduced one- and two-dimensional tongue, but not jaw, movements compared to control speakers and treatment for tongue and jaw tumors resulted in smaller tongue movements. A larger sample size is needed to establish a more generalizable connection between the AWS and the SHI. Further research should explore how these kinematic changes in ITOC are related to acoustic and perceptual measures of speech. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Characterizing Speech Phenotype in Individuals With Craniofacial Microsomia: A Scoping Review.
- Author
-
Kinter, Sara, Kotlarek, Katelyn, Meehan, Anna, and Heike, Carrie
- Subjects
- *
CINAHL database , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *SPEECH disorders , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *INTELLIGIBILITY of speech , *AGE distribution , *GOLDENHAR syndrome , *SPEECH evaluation , *VELOPHARYNGEAL insufficiency , *ARTICULATION disorders , *RISK assessment , *SEARCH engines , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LITERATURE reviews , *MEDLINE , *DISEASE risk factors , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Introduction: Craniofacial microsomia (CFM) is a complex congenital condition primarily affecting the ear, mandible, facial nerve and muscles, and tongue. Individuals with CFM are at increased risk of hearing loss, obstructive sleep apnea, and feeding/swallowing difficulties. The purpose of this scoping review was to summarize evidence pertaining to speech production in CFM. Method: All articles reporting any characteristic of speech production in CFM were included and screened by two independent reviewers by title, abstract, and full text. Data charting captured details related to study population and design, CFM diagnostic criteria, speech outcome measurement, and key findings. The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Extension for Scoping Reviews checklist guided reporting of results. Our protocol was registered on the Open Science Framework (https://osf.io/npr94/) and published elsewhere. Results: Forty-five articles were included in the detailed review. Most articles originated from the United States, were published in the past decade, and utilized case report/series study design. A speech-language pathologist authored 29%. The prevalence of velopharyngeal insufficiency ranged from 19% to 55% among studies. Oral distortion of alveolar and palatal fricatives and affricates primarily characterized articulation errors. Studies identified increased disordered speech and lower intelligibility in adolescents with CFM compared to unaffected peers. Evidence pertaining to phonatory and respiratory speech findings is limited. Conclusions: Evidence supports that individuals with CFM are at increased risk of both velopharyngeal and articulatory speech differences. Additional information is needed to develop speech screening guidelines for children with CFM. Heterogeneity in study design and outcome measurement precludes comparisons across studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. A Fine-Grained Temporal Analysis of Multimodal Oral Diadochokinetic Performance to Assess Speech Impairment in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis.
- Author
-
Panying Rong and Rasmussen, Lily
- Subjects
- *
SPEECH disorders , *SPEECH evaluation , *AMYOTROPHIC lateral sclerosis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DATA analysis software , *DISEASE complications ,SPEECH disorder diagnosis - Abstract
Purpose: This study used a semiautomated fine-grained temporal analysis to extract features of temporal oral diadochokinetic (DDK) performance across multiple modalities and tasks, from neurologically healthy and impaired individuals secondary to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The aims were to (a) delineate temporal oral DDK deficits relating to the neuromotor pathology of ALS and (b) identify the optimal task-feature combinations to detect speech impairment in ALS. Method: Mandibular myoelectric, kinematic, and acoustic data were acquired from 13 individuals with ALS and 10 healthy controls producing three alternating motion rate tasks and one sequential motion rate task. Twenty-seven features were extracted from the multimodal data, characterizing three temporal constructs: duration/rate, variability, and coordination. The disease impacts on these features were assessed across tasks, and the task eliciting the greatest disease-related change was identified for each feature. Such "optimal" task-feature combinations were fed into logistic regression to differentiate individuals with ALS from healthy controls. Results: Temporal deficits in ALS were characterized by (a) increased duration and variability and reduced coordination of jaw muscle activities, (b) increased duration and variability and altered temporal symmetry of jaw velocity profile, (c) increased muscle-burst-to-peak-velocity duration, and (d) increased motion-tovoice onset duration. These temporal features were differentially affected across tasks. The optimal task-feature combinations, which were further clustered into three composite factors reflecting temporal variability, coarser-grained duration, and finer-grained duration, differentiated ALS from controls with an F1 score of 0.86 (precision = 1.00, recall = 0.75). Conclusions: Temporal oral DDK deficits are likely attributed to a hierarchy of interrelated neurophysiological and biomechanical factors associated with the neuromotor pathology of ALS. These deficits, as assessed crossmodally, provide previously unavailable insights into the multifaceted timing impairment of oromotor performance in ALS. The optimal task-feature combinations targeting these deficits show promise as quantitative markers for (early) detection of speech impairment in ALS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Feedback From Automatic Speech Recognition to Elicit Clear Speech in Healthy Speakers.
- Author
-
Gutz, Sarah E., Maffei, Marc F., and Green, Jordan R.
- Subjects
- *
VOWELS , *DYSARTHRIA , *INTELLIGIBILITY of speech , *SPEECH disorders , *AUDITORY perception , *AUTOMATIC speech recognition , *SPEECH evaluation , *MACHINE learning , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *VERBAL behavior testing , *AUTOMATION , *QUALITY assurance , *RESEARCH funding , *ARTICULATION (Speech) , *EVALUATION ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Purpose: This study assessed the effectiveness of feedback generated by automatic speech recognition (ASR) for eliciting clear speech from young, healthy individuals. As a preliminary step toward exploring a novel method for eliciting clear speech in patients with dysarthria, we investigated the effects of ASR feedback in healthy controls. If successful, ASR feedback has the potential to facilitate independent, at-home clear speech practice. Method: Twenty-three healthy control speakers (ages 23-40 years) read sentences aloud in three speaking modes: Habitual, Clear (over-enunciated), and in response to ASR feedback (ASR). In the ASR condition, we used Mozilla DeepSpeech to transcribe speech samples and provide participants with a value indicating the accuracy of the ASR's transcription. For speakers who achieved sufficiently high ASR accuracy, noise was added to their speech at a participant-specific signal-to-noise ratio to ensure that each participant had to over-enunciate to achieve high ASR accuracy. Results: Compared to habitual speech, speech produced in the ASR and Clear conditions was clearer, as rated by speech-language pathologists, and more intelligible, per speech-language pathologist transcriptions. Speech in the Clear and ASR conditions aligned on several acoustic measures, particularly those associated with increased vowel distinctiveness and decreased speaking rate. However, ASR accuracy, intelligibility, and clarity were each correlated with different speech features, which may have implications for how people change their speech for ASR feedback. Conclusions: ASR successfully elicited outcomes similar to clear speech in healthy speakers. Future work should investigate its efficacy in eliciting clear speech in people with dysarthria. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The Outcomes of Remote Administration of Combined Aphasia and Apraxia of Speech Treatment: A Single-Subject Experimental Design Study.
- Author
-
Kallhoff, Lydia, Pang Tao Moua, Salomon, Daniel, and Wambaugh, Julie
- Subjects
- *
EXPERIMENTAL design , *RELIABILITY (Personality trait) , *SPEECH apraxia , *SPEECH therapy , *SPEECH disorders , *INDEPENDENT variables , *EFFECT sizes (Statistics) , *INTELLIGIBILITY of speech , *VIDEOCONFERENCING , *APHASIA , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *MATHEMATICAL variables , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *COMBINED modality therapy , *TELEMEDICINE - Abstract
Purpose: This study was designed to examine the outcomes of Combined Aphasia and Apraxia of Speech Treatment (CAAST) administered remotely in terms of acquisition and generalization effects and to compare these effects to previous in-person CAAST studies and Response Elaboration Training (RET)/ Modified-Response Elaboration Training (M-RET) benchmarks. Method: Multiple probe designs across participants and behaviors were employed with three speakers with chronic aphasia and apraxia of speech. Correct information units (CIUs) were the primary outcome measure to measure changes in language production. Percent consonants correct (PCC) was used as the secondary outcome measure to evaluate changes in speech sound accuracy. Production of CIUs was compared with existing benchmarks from Bunker et al.’s (2019) meta-analysis of previous RET/M-RET studies. In addition, both CIUs and PCC were compared with the most recent CAAST in-person studies. Results: All participants demonstrated substantial increases in CIUs for treated and untreated picture sets, comparable to outcomes of in-person CAAST administration. These language changes were maintained at posttreatment intervals for all participants. PCC also improved for all participants, with gains in articulatory accuracy being maintained posttreatment. Conclusions: Improvements in CIU production and PCC for all three participants were in keeping with results from Wambaugh et al. (2017). These findings provide additional support for the efficacy of CAAST and indicate that remote administration may be a viable alternative to in-person application. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Self-Stigma of Stuttering: Implications for Communicative Participation and Mental Health.
- Author
-
Boyle, Michael P., Cheyne, Madeline R., and Rosen, Amy L.
- Subjects
- *
STUTTERING , *SOCIAL participation , *PILOT projects , *WELL-being , *MATHEMATICAL models , *SPEECH disorders , *SOCIAL stigma , *SURVEYS , *COMMUNICATION , *THEORY , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine if self-stigma-related variables predicted communicative participation and mental health in adults who stutter. A progressive model of self-stigma was theorized and tested. Method: Adults who stutter (N = 344) completed a survey that included measures of communicative participation, global mental health, and a variety of self-stigma-related variables including perceived enacted stigma, stigma awareness, anticipated stigma, felt stigma, stereotype agreement, and stigma application, in addition to demographic and speech-related variables. Hierarchical regression was performed to test whether self-stigma-related variables progressively explained significant variance in both communicative participation and global mental health.c Results: After controlling for demographic and speech-related variables, stigma-related variables were found to be significant predictors of both communicative participation and global mental health among adults who stutter. Most self-stigma-related variables entered later in the model predicted additional unique variance in the outcome variables than the self-stigma-related variables entered in previous steps, thus supporting the trickle-down and progressive nature of the self-stigma model theorized. Conclusions: Accounting for self-stigma in the assessment and treatment of individuals who stutter may identify and ultimately reduce environmental and personal barriers to communicative functioning and well-being in people who stutter. The self-stigma terminology and model described in this study will help practitioners, researchers, and the public better understand the process of selfstigma and how it may be associated with adverse outcomes experienced by people who stutter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Shared and Separate Neuromuscular Underpinnings of Swallowing and Motor Speech Development in the School-Age Years.
- Author
-
Hahn Arkenberg, Rachel E., Brown, Barbara, Mitchell, Samantha, Craig, Bruce A., Goffman, Lisa, and Malandraki, Georgia A.
- Subjects
- *
STATISTICAL power analysis , *STATISTICS , *RELIABILITY (Personality trait) , *NEUROPHYSIOLOGY , *DEGLUTITION , *SPEECH disorders , *CROSS-sectional method , *DEGLUTITION disorders , *NEUROMUSCULAR system , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *COMPARATIVE studies , *T-test (Statistics) , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *ELECTROMYOGRAPHY , *NECK muscles , *DATA analysis , *FACIAL muscles , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Purpose: Despite co-occurrence of swallowing and speech disorders in childhood, there is limited research on shared and separate neuromuscular underpinnings of these functions. The purpose of this study was to (a) compare neuromuscular control of swallowing and speech between younger and older children and (b) determine similarities and differences in neuromuscular control of swallowing and speech. Method: Twenty-six typically developing children (thirteen 7- to 8-year-olds and thirteen 11- to 12-year-olds) completed this cross-sectional study.Neuromuscular control was evaluated using surface electromyography of submental muscles and superior and inferior orbicularis oris muscles during parallel tasks of swallowing and speech. Outcomemeasures included normalized mean amplitude, burst duration, time to peak amplitude, and bilateral synchrony, whichwere examined using mixed-effectsmodels. Results: For normalized mean amplitude, burst duration, and time to peak amplitude, there were significant two- and three-way interactions between muscle group, task, and age group, indicating that older and younger children demonstrated different muscle activation patterns, and these patterns varied by muscle and task. No differences were noted between groups for bilateral synchrony. For parallel tasks, children demonstrated different magnitudes of normalized mean amplitude and time to peak amplitude of speech and swallowing. However, they demonstrated a similar pattern: increases in magnitude as task complexity increased. Conclusions: Children continue to demonstrate refinement of their neuromuscular control of swallowing and speech between 7-8 and 11-12 years of age, and there are both shared and separate elements of neuromuscular control between these two vital functions. To improve generalizability of findings, future research should include longitudinal analysis of swallowing and speech development, as well as measures of central neurophysiology. Supplemental Material: https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.23796258 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Neural Changes in Children With Residual Speech Sound Disorder After Ultrasound Biofeedback Speech Therapy.
- Author
-
Spencer, Caroline, Vannest, Jennifer, Preston, Jonathan L., Maas, Edwin, Sizemore, Erin Redle, McAllister, Tara, Whalen, D. H., Maloney, Thomas, and Boyce, Suzanne
- Subjects
- *
BRAIN physiology , *BRAIN , *STUTTERING , *AFFINITY groups , *SPEECH perception , *COMPUTER software , *SPEECH therapy , *ULTRASONIC imaging , *SPEECH disorders , *CROSS-sectional method , *CHILD development , *TIME , *BIOFEEDBACK training , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *GOODNESS-of-fit tests , *ARTICULATION disorders , *WORD deafness , *FUNCTIONAL assessment , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH funding , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SPEECH , *NEURORADIOLOGY , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Purpose: Children with residual speech sound disorders (RSSD) have shown differences in neural function for speech production, as compared to their typical peers; however, information about how these differences may change over time and relative to speech therapy is needed. To address this gap, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to examine functional activation and connectivity on adaptations of the syllable repetition task (SRT-Early Sounds and SRT-Late Sounds) in children with RSSD before and after a speech therapy program. Method: Sixteen children with RSSD completed an fMRI experiment before (Time 1) and after (Time 2) a speech therapy program with ultrasound visual feedback for /r/ misarticulation. Progress in therapy was measured via perceptual ratings of productions of untreated /r/ word probes. To control for practice effects and developmental change in patterns of activation and connectivity, 17 children with typical speech development (TD) completed the fMRI at Time 1 and Time 2. Functional activation was analyzed using a region-of-interest approach and functional connectivity was analyzed using a seed-to-voxel approach. Results: Children with RSSD showed a range of responses to therapy. After correcting for multiple comparisons, we did not observe any statistically significant cross-sectional differences or longitudinal changes in functional activation. A negative relationship between therapy effect size and functional activation in the left visual association cortex was on the SRT-Late Sounds after therapy, but it did not survive correction for multiple comparisons. Significant longitudinal changes in functional connectivity were observed for the RSSD group on SRT-Early Sounds and SRT-Late Sounds, as well as for the TD group on the SRT-Early Sounds. RSSD and TD groups showed connectivity differences near the left insula on the SRT-Late Sounds at Time 2. Conclusion: RSSD and treatment with ultrasound visual feedback may thus be associated with neural differences in speech motor and visual association processes recruited for speech production. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Introduction to the Forum: Native Language, Dialect, and Foreign Accent in Dysarthria.
- Author
-
Yunjung Kim
- Subjects
- *
DIALECTS , *DYSARTHRIA , *MOVEMENT disorders , *MULTILINGUALISM , *LINGUISTICS , *FOREIGN accent syndrome , *SPEECH disorders , *PHONETICS , *LANGUAGE acquisition - Abstract
This timely collection is an international effort to serve as a foundation to encourage research that offers insights into the interaction between language variation and motor speech disorders. Specifically, this forum aimed to provide a platform that (a) explores and demonstrates the role of language variation in the manifestation of dysarthria, (b) considers language variation in clinical assessment and management, and (c) promotes awareness of diverse language backgrounds of people with dysarthria. The forum contains six articles, spanning a variety of research designs (cross-sectional, pre- and post-treatment), kinds of articles (tutorial, research article, commentary), and a range of languages from around the world (English, French, Korean Portuguese, Spanish). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Quantifying Spatial and Temporal Variability of Clear and Loud Speech Produced While Performing a Concurrent Visuomotor Task.
- Author
-
Whitfield, Jason A., Kriegel, Zoe, and Fullenkamp, Adam M.
- Subjects
- *
RANGE of motion of joints , *MEAN length of utterance , *SPEECH disorders , *SPEECH evaluation , *PSYCHOLOGY of movement , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *ATTENTION , *BODY movement , *QUALITY of life , *RESEARCH funding , *MOTION capture (Human mechanics) , *BODY language , *SPEECH , *KINEMATICS , *DIGITAL video ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this research note was to quantify the impact of concurrent performance of an attention-demanding secondary task on utteranceto-utterance movement variability associated with higher effort speaking styles, namely, clear and loud speech. Method: Lip and jaw kinematics collected as part of a prior study were analyzed. Participants repeated "Buy Bobby a puppy" using habitual, loud, and clear speech styles in isolation and while performing a secondary tracking task. The lip aperture (LA) signal was segmented based on opening and closing gestures associated with the utterance. The standard deviation of each segment duration was calculated to quantify temporal variability. To quantify spatial variability, each segment was first time normalized. The mean standard deviation of the overlapping time-normalized LA amplitudes was computed for each segment from the repetitions produced in each speech style and condition (speaking in isolation vs. speaking while tracking). A relative measure of spatial variation was also computed to account for the potential impact of articulatory scaling. Results: Clear speech was associated with greater temporal and spatial variability than the habitual and loud styles. In the habitual style, talkers also exhibited a slight reduction in absolute spatial variability when speaking while tracking compared to speaking in isolation. The reduction in absolute spatial variability was likely associated with the concomitant reduction in LA range of motion, as there was no change in the relative spatial variability between conditions. Conclusion: The current investigation expands prior work by quantifying spatial and temporal characteristics of different speaking styles performed in isolation and while concurrently performing an attention-demanding visuomotor task. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Rate Modulation Abilities in Acquired Motor Speech Disorders.
- Author
-
Utianski, Rene L., Duffy, Joseph R., Martin, Peter R., Clark, Heather M., Stierwalt, Julie A. G., Botha, Hugo, Ali, Farwa, Whitwell, Jennifer L., and Josephs, Keith A.
- Subjects
- *
DYSARTHRIA , *SPEECH disorders , *MOVEMENT disorders , *ARTICULATION disorders , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DATA analysis software , *CEREBRAL palsy , *NEURODEGENERATION ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to describe, compare, and understand speech modulation capabilities of patients with varying motor speech disorders (MSDs) in a paradigm in which patients made highly cued attempts to speak faster or slower. Method: Twenty-nine patients, 12 with apraxia of speech (AOS; four phonetic and eight prosodic subtype), eight with dysarthria (six hypokinetic and two spastic subtype), and nine patients without any neurogenic MSD completed a standard motor speech evaluation where they were asked to repeat words and sentences, which served as their "natural" speaking rate. They were then asked to repeat lower complexity (counting 1-5; repeating "cat" and "catnip" 3 times each) and higher complexity stimuli (repeating "catastrophe" and "stethoscope" 3 times each and "My physician wrote out a prescription" once) as fast/slow as possible. Word durations and interword intervals were measured. Linear mixed-effects models were used to assess differences related to MSD subtype and stimuli complexity on bidirectional rate modulation capacity as indexed by word duration and interword interval. Articulatory accuracy was also judged and compared. Results: Patients with prosodic AOS demonstrated a reduced ability to go faster; while they performed similarly to patients with spastic dysarthria when counting, patients with spastic dysarthria were able to increase rate similar to controls during sentence repetition; patients with prosodic AOS could not and made increased articulatory errors attempting to increase rate. AOS patients made more articulatory errors relative to other groups, regardless of condition; however, their percentage of errors reduced with an intentionally slowed speaking rate. Conclusions: The findings suggest comparative rate modulation abilities in conjunction with their impact on articulatory accuracy may support differential diagnosis between healthy and abnormal speech and among subtypes of MSDs (i.e., type of dysarthria or AOS). Findings need to be validated in a larger, more representative cohort encompassing several types of MSDs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Automated Vowel Articulation Analysis in Connected Speech Among Progressive Neurological Diseases, Dysarthria Types, and Dysarthria Severities.
- Author
-
Illner, Vojtech, Tykalova, Tereza, Skrabal, Dominik, Klempir, Jiri, and Rusz, Jan
- Subjects
- *
VOWELS , *STATISTICS , *DYSARTHRIA , *NEUROLOGICAL disorders , *SPEECH disorders , *QUANTITATIVE research , *FISHER exact test , *SEVERITY of illness index , *AUTOMATION , *RESEARCH funding , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) , *DATA analysis software , *DATA analysis , *ALGORITHMS , *DISEASE risk factors , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Purpose: Although articulatory impairment represents distinct speech characteristics in most neurological diseases affecting movement, methods allowing automated assessments of articulation deficits from the connected speech are scarce. This study aimed to design a fully automated method for analyzing dysarthria-related vowel articulation impairment and estimate its sensitivity in a broad range of neurological diseases and various types and severities of dysarthria. Method: Unconstrained monologue and reading passages were acquired from 459 speakers, including 306 healthy controls and 153 neurological patients. The algorithm utilized a formant tracker in combination with a phoneme recognizer and subsequent signal processing analysis. Results: Articulatory undershoot of vowels was presented in a broad spectrum of progressive neurodegenerative diseases, including Parkinson's disease, progressive supranuclear palsy, multiple-system atrophy, Huntington's disease, essential tremor, cerebellar ataxia, multiple sclerosis, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, as well as in related dysarthria subtypes including hypokinetic, hyperkinetic, ataxic, spastic, flaccid, and their mixed variants. Formant ratios showed a higher sensitivity to vowel deficits than vowel space area. First formants of corner vowels were significantly lower for multiple-system atrophy than cerebellar ataxia. Second formants of vowels /a/ and /i/ were lower in ataxic compared to spastic dysarthria. Discriminant analysis showed a classification score of up to 41.0% for disease type, 39.3% for dysarthria type, and 49.2% for dysarthria severity. Algorithm accuracy reached an F-score of 0.77. Conclusions: Distinctive vowel articulation alterations reflect underlying pathophysiology in neurological diseases. Objective acoustic analysis of vowel articulation has the potential to provide a universal method to screen motor speech disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Motor Speech Phenotypes in Children With Epilepsy: Preliminary Findings.
- Author
-
Allison, Kristen, Stoeckel, Ruth, Olsen, Emily, Tallman, Sarah, and Iuzzini-Seigel, Jenya
- Subjects
- *
RESEARCH , *SPEECH apraxia , *DYSARTHRIA , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *EPILEPSY , *SPEECH disorders , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *RESEARCH methodology , *MOVEMENT disorders , *DIFFERENTIAL diagnosis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SEIZURES (Medicine) , *DATA analysis software , *LONGITUDINAL method , *DISEASE complications , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Purpose: This exploratory study aimed to characterize motor speech impairments in a small sample of children with epilepsy, both with and without a known seizure etiology. A secondary aim was to evaluate the validity of the Profile for Childhood Apraxia of speech and Dysarthria (ProCAD), a newly developed tool for differential diagnosis of childhood apraxia of speech and dysarthria. Method: Thirteen children with seizure disorders completed a comprehensive speech and language assessment. Three expert speech-language pathologists rated the presence of auditory-perceptual features of motor speech impairment using the ProCAD. Motor speech features, diagnoses, and standardized test scores were compared between children with a known seizure etiology and children with idiopathic epilepsy. Results: Nine of the 13 children exhibited motor speech impairment; dysarthria was the most common diagnosis. Most children (11/13) exhibited language impairment. Group comparisons showed that children with a known seizure etiology had more atypical motor speech features and lower language scores than children with idiopathic seizures. Conclusion: These preliminary findings suggest a high rate of motor speech impairment among children with epilepsy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Reframing Bilingual Acquisition and Theory: An Insider Perspective Through a Translanguaging Lens.
- Author
-
Garivaldo, Brandon and Fabiano-Smith, Leah
- Subjects
- *
COGNITIVE restructuring therapy , *MULTILINGUALISM , *SPEECH disorders , *LINGUISTICS , *RACE , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *COMMUNICATIVE disorders , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *THEORY , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *PHONETICS , *LANGUAGE disorders , *CHILDREN ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech - Abstract
Purpose: This exploratory study developed a process for reinterpreting previously published research studies in the bilingual literature. Three previously published studies on bilingual phonological acquisition were revisited due to the following characteristics: (a) they applied a theoretical framework for bilingual speech production developed by white bilingual researchers, the dual-systems hypothesis, and (b) project data were interpreted without the input and perspective of researchers representative of the community being studied. This study aims to provide a guide for the readership to reinterpret developmental speech and language studies on bilingual children through (a) the theoretical framework of translanguaging, which was developed by minoritized bilingual scholars and members of the community being studied, and (b) community Insider lenses, or the perspectives of research team members whose lived linguistic experiences match those of the target population studied. Method: Original interpretations of data were reexamined and reinterpreted incorporating (a) a research team member from the target community and (b) a novel theoretical lens developed by members of the target community called translanguaging. Results: Original findings were extended through the application of translanguaging as a theoretical lens. New interpretations of original data were uncovered when a researcher from the Latinx community was involved in the data interpretation process. New insights were gained on phonological acquisition in bilingual Spanish–English–speaking preschoolers by applying a reinterpretation framework. Conclusions: Differences in data interpretation reveal that translanguaging may improve understanding of languaging in bilingual/multilingual communities. Implications for development of representative research teams when examining minoritized pediatric populations are also discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Tongue Shape Complexity in Children With and Without Speech Sound Disorders.
- Author
-
Dokovova, Marie, Sugden, Ellie, Cartney, Gemma, Schaeffler, Sonja, and Cleland, Joanne
- Subjects
- *
TONGUE physiology , *RESEARCH , *SPEECH disorders , *CROSS-sectional method , *AGE distribution , *TONGUE , *REGRESSION analysis , *ARTICULATION disorders , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SEVERITY of illness index , *PHONETICS , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CONSONANTS , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICAL correlation , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Purpose: This study investigates the hypothesis that younger speakers and speakers with more severe speech sound disorders are more likely to use simpler (undifferentiated) tongue gestures due to difficulties with, or immaturity of, lingual motor control. Method: The hypothesis is tested using cross-sectional secondary data analysis of synchronous audio and high-speed ultrasound recordings from children with idiopathic speech sound disorders (n = 30, aged 5;0–12;11 [years;months]) and typically developing children (n = 29, aged 5;8–12;10), producing /a/, /t/, /ɹ/, /l/, /s/, and /ʃ/ in an intervocalic /aCa/ environment. Tongue shape complexity is measured using NINFL (Number of INFLections) and modified curvature index (MCI) from splines fitted to ultrasound images at the point of maximal lingual gesture. Age, perceived accuracy, and consonant are used as predictors. Results: The results suggest that as age increases, children with speech sound disorders have lower MCI compared to typically developing children. Increase in age also led to decrease of MCI for the typically developing group. In the group of children with speech sound disorders, perceptually incorrect /ɹ/ productions have lower MCI than correct productions, relative to /a/. Conclusions: There is some evidence of systematic tongue shape complexity differences between typically developing children and children with speech sound disorders when accounting for increase in age. Among children with speech sound disorders, increase in age and perceptually incorrect consonant realizations are associated with decreasing tongue shape complexity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Effects of Aided Communication on Communicative Participation for People With Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis.
- Author
-
Peters, Betts, Wiedrick, Jack, and Baylor, Carolyn
- Subjects
- *
FACILITATED communication , *PATIENT participation , *DYSARTHRIA , *SELF-evaluation , *SPEECH disorders , *CROSS-sectional method , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *AMYOTROPHIC lateral sclerosis , *COMMUNICATION devices for people with disabilities , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *COMMUNICATION , *RESEARCH funding , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DATA analysis software , *SPEECH - Abstract
Purpose: Many people with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (PALS) experience speech changes, which may interfere with participation in communication situations. This study was designed to investigate the effects of aided communication on self-rated communicative participation among PALS and the relationship between speech function and communicative participation for PALS at various stages of speech impairment and communication aid use. Method: Participants with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis completed an online questionnaire in which they identified their current communication methods, rated their speech function, and rated their communicative participation in various situations on a modified version of the Communicative Participation Item Bank short form. PALS who reported using aided communication rated their communicative participation under two conditions: with unaided communication only and with access to all of their communication methods. Results: Communication aids appeared to support communicative participation for many participants with dysarthria. Across all levels of speech function, PALS who use aided communication reported better participation under the all methods condition than the unaided-only condition, with the largest benefits for participants with anarthria (Revised ALS Functional Rating Scale [ALSFRS-R] speech rating = 0). Communicative participation ratings worsened with more severe speech impairment under both conditions for most levels of speech function, but PALS with anarthria (ALSFRS-R speech rating = 0) reported better participation under the all-methods condition than those who used residual speech in combination with non speech methods (ALSFRS-R speech rating = 1). Conclusions: Aided communication can help PALS continue to participate in various communication situations as their speech function deteriorates. Variability in self-rated communicative participation, even for PALS at the same level of speech function, highlights the need for an individualized approach and consideration of personal and environmental factors in augmentative and alternative communication intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Reproducible Speech Research With the Artificial Intelligence–Ready PERCEPT Corpora.
- Author
-
Benway, Nina R., Preston, Jonathan L., Hitchcock, Elaine, Rose, Yvan, Salekin, Asif, Liang, Wendy, and McAllister, Tara
- Subjects
- *
SPEECH disorders , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *SPEECH evaluation , *ARTICULATION disorders , *SOFTWARE architecture , *PHONETICS , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DATA analysis software , *EVALUATION ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Background: Publicly available speech corpora facilitate reproducible research by providing open-access data for participants who have consented/assented to data sharing among different research teams. Such corpora can also support clinical education, including perceptual training and training in the use of speech analysis tools. Purpose: In this research note, we introduce the PERCEPT (Perceptual Error Rating for the Clinical Evaluation of Phonetic Targets) corpora, PERCEPT-R (Rhotics) and PERCEPT-GFTA (Goldman-Fristoe Test of Articulation), which together contain over 36 hr of speech audio (> 125,000 syllable, word, and phrase utterances) from children, adolescents, and young adults aged 6– 24 years with speech sound disorder (primarily residual speech sound disorders impacting /ɹ/) and age-matched peers. We highlight PhonBank as the repository for the corpora and demonstrate use of the associated speech analysis software, Phon, to query PERCEPT-R. A worked example of research with PERCEPT-R, suitable for clinical education and research training, is included as an appendix. Support for end users and information/descriptive statistics for future releases of the PERCEPT corpora can be found in a dedicated Slack channel. Finally, we discuss the potential for PERCEPT corpora to support the training of artificial intelligence clinical speech technology appropriate for use with children with speech sound disorders, the development of which has historically been constrained by the limited representation of either children or individuals with speech impairments in publicly available training corpora. Conclusions: We demonstrate the use of PERCEPT corpora, PhonBank, and Phon for clinical training and research questions appropriate to child citation speech. Increased use of these tools has the potential to enhance reproducibility in the study of speech development and disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Bioenvironmental Predictors of Childhood Reading and Speech Difficulties.
- Author
-
Michaelides, Orestis and Luciano, Michelle
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION of mothers , *RESEARCH , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *HOME environment , *PREMATURE infants , *READING disability , *SPEECH disorders , *REGRESSION analysis , *GESTATIONAL age , *RISK assessment , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *SEX distribution , *SOUND recordings , *SOCIAL classes , *ODDS ratio , *LONGITUDINAL method , *SECONDARY analysis , *DISEASE risk factors , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Purpose: Reading and speech difficulties are common in childhood, yet it is not fully understood how much of their etiology is shared. This partly derives from methodological issues related to overlooking the potential co-occurrence between the two sets of difficulties. This study investigated the effects of five bioenvironmental predictors in a sample assessed for such co-occurrence. Method: A combination of exploratory and confirmatory analyses was performed on longitudinal data from the National Child Development Study. Exploratory latent class analysis was performed on children’s reading, speech, and language outcomes at ages 7 and 11 years. Membership in the obtained classes was modeled using a regression with sex and four early-life predictors: gestation period, socioeconomic status, maternal education, and the home reading environment. Results: The model yielded four latent classes that broadly reflected (1) average reading and speech, (2) excellent reading, (3) reading difficulties, and (4) speech difficulties. Early-life factors significantly predicted class membership. Male sex and preterm birth emerged as risk factors for both reading and speech difficulties. Protective effects against reading difficulties were identified for maternal education, and lower (but not higher) levels of socioeconomic status and the home reading environment. Conclusions: Co-occurrence of reading and speech difficulties in the sample was low, and differential patterns of effect of the social environment were supported. Reading outcomes were under stronger malleable influence than speech outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Speech Motor Profiles in Primary Progressive Aphasia.
- Author
-
Staiger, Anja, Schroeter, Matthias L., Ziegler, Wolfram, Pino, Danièle, Regenbrecht, Frank, Schölderle, Theresa, Rieger, Theresa, Riedl, Lina, Müller-Sarnowski, Felix, and Diehl-Schmid, Janine
- Subjects
- *
STUTTERING , *RELIABILITY (Personality trait) , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *DYSARTHRIA , *ACADEMIC medical centers , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *SPEECH disorders , *MOVEMENT disorders , *QUANTITATIVE research , *SPEECH evaluation , *MANN Whitney U Test , *APHASIA , *QUALITATIVE research , *SEVERITY of illness index , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SYMPTOMS , *DISEASE complications ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech - Abstract
Purpose: Previous research on motor speech disorders (MSDs) in primary progressive aphasia (PPA) has largely focused on patients with the nonfluent/ agrammatic variant of PPA (nfvPPA), with few systematic descriptions of MSDs in variants other than nfvPPA. There has also been an emphasis on studying apraxia of speech, whereas less is known about dysarthria or other forms of MSDs. This study aimed to examine the qualitative and quantitative characteristics of MSDs in a prospective sample of individuals with PPA independent of subtype. Method: We included 38 participants with a root diagnosis of PPA according to current consensus criteria, including one case with primary progressive apraxia of speech. Speech tasks comprised various speech modalities and levels of complexity. Expert raters used a novel protocol for auditory speech analyses covering all major dimensions of speech. Results: Of the participants, 47.4% presented with some form of MSD. Individual speech motor profiles varied widely with respect to the different speech dimensions. Besides apraxia of speech, we observed different dysarthria syndromes, special forms of MSDs (e.g., neurogenic stuttering), and mixed forms. Degrees of severity ranged from mild to severe. We also observed MSDs in patients whose speech and language profiles were incompatible with nfvPPA. Conclusions: The results confirm that MSDs are common in PPA and can manifest in different syndromes. The findings emphasize that future studies of MSDs in PPA should be extended to all clinical variants and should take into account the qualitative characteristics of motor speech dysfunction across speech dimensions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Speech and Language Characteristics of Neurologically Healthy Adults When Describing the Modern Cookie Theft Picture: Mixing the New With the Old.
- Author
-
Hux, Karen and Frodsham, Kayla
- Subjects
- *
LINGUISTICS , *SPEECH disorders , *NURSING care plans , *SELF-evaluation , *SPEECH evaluation , *AUDIOVISUAL materials , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *TASK performance , *ACQUISITION of data , *COMPARATIVE studies , *T-test (Statistics) , *SYMPTOMS , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *MEDICAL records , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *COGNITIVE testing , *DATA analysis software , *LANGUAGE disorders , *SPEECH therapists , *ADULTS ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Purpose: The Modern Cookie Theft picture has recently become available. This study’s purpose was to compare (a) speech and language production by neurologically healthy adults (NHAs) given a generic instruction to describe the picture versus instruction to describe it as if talking with someone who was blind and (b) production during the first 90 s versus full samples. Method: One hundred NHAs minus five outliers formed two participant groups. Each group heard either the original or modified task instruction. Transcriptions of resulting descriptions were analyzed regarding duration, word and T-unit productivity, content units (CUs), and main concepts (MCs) both in full and 90-s samples. Identified CUs and MCs were compared with existing lists from previous research. Results: Significantly longer samples and greater verbosity occurred with the modified versus original instruction even when limiting time to a 90 s maximum. With the modified instruction, CUs included 119 and 138 terms for truncated and full samples, respectively; participants mentioned 98 and 104 CUs, respectively, given the original instruction. MCs expressed were 18 and 19 for truncated and full samples, respectively, given the modified instruction; with the original instruction, this dropped to 11 and 12 MCs for truncated and full samples, respectively. Within samples, CU and MC repetitions were greater given modified rather than original instruction. Conclusions: Normative productivity and content generation data are critical for guiding diagnostic efforts and treatment planning. Benefits and detriments associated with differing productivity and content redundancy secondary to varying instructions and analysis time frames are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Singing and Speaking Ability in Parkinson’s Disease and Spinocerebellar Ataxia.
- Author
-
Yoonji Kim, Sidtis, Diana, and Sidtis, John J.
- Subjects
- *
PARKINSON'S disease diagnosis , *DYSARTHRIA , *SINGING , *AUDITORY perception , *INTELLIGIBILITY of speech , *SPEECH disorders , *BASAL ganglia , *VOCAL cords , *SPEECH evaluation , *CEREBELLAR ataxia , *COMPARATIVE studies , *INTER-observer reliability , *SPINOCEREBELLAR ataxia , *HYPOKINETIC dysarthria , *CEREBELLUM diseases , *SOUND recordings , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LISTENING , *ACOUSTIC stimulation , *PUBLIC speaking - Abstract
Purpose: This study examined spontaneous, spoken-to-a-model, and two sung modes in speakers with Parkinson’s disease (PD), speakers with cerebellar disease (CD), and healthy controls. Vocal performance was measured by intelligibility scores and listeners’ perceptual ratings. Method: Participants included speakers with hypokinetic dysarthria secondary to PD, those with ataxic dysarthria secondary to CD, and healthy speakers. Participants produced utterances in four vocal modes: spontaneous speech, spoken-to-a-model, sung-to-a-model, and spontaneous singing. For spoken-to-a-model and sung-to-a-model modes, written material was provided the model. For spontaneous singing, participants sang songs that they endorsed as familiar. Dependent variables: In Experiment I, listeners orthographically transcribed the audio samples of the first three vocal modes. In Experiment IIa, raters evaluated the accuracy of the pitch and rhythm of the spontaneous singing of familiar songs. Finally, familiar songs and sung-to-a-model utterances were rated on a competency scale by a second group of raters (Experiment IIb). Results: Results showed increases in intelligibility during the spoken-to-a model mode compared with the spontaneous mode in both PD and CD groups. Singing enhanced the vocal output of speakers with PD more than in speakers with CD, as measured by percent intelligibility. PD participants’ pitch and rhythm accuracy and competency in singing familiar songs was rated more favorably than those produced by CD participants. Conclusions: The findings reveal a vocal task effect for spoken utterances in both groups. Sung exemplars, more impaired in CD, suggest a significant involvement of the cerebellum in singing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Functional Role of Temporal Patterning of Articulation in Speech Production: A Novel Perspective Toward Global Timing–Based Motor Speech Assessment and Rehabilitation.
- Author
-
Panying Rong and Heidrick, Lindsey
- Subjects
- *
SPEECH disorders , *INTELLIGIBILITY of speech , *SPEECH evaluation , *COMPARATIVE studies , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *AMYOTROPHIC lateral sclerosis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Purpose: This study aimed to (a) relate temporal patterning of articulation to functional speech outcomes in neurologically healthy and impaired speakers, (b) identify changes in temporal patterning of articulation in neurologically impaired speakers, and (c) evaluate how these changes can be modulated by speaking rate manipulation. Method: Thirteen individuals with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and 10 neurologically healthy controls read a sentence 3 times, first at their habitual rate and then at a voluntarily slowed rate. Temporal patterning of articulation was assessed by 24 features characterizing the modulation patterns within (intra) and between (inter) four articulators (tongue tip, tongue body, lower lip, and jaw) at three linguistically relevant, hierarchically nested timescales corresponding to stress, syllable, and onset–rime/phoneme. For Aim 1, the features for the habitual rate condition were factorized and correlated with two functional speech outcomes—speech intelligibility and intelligible speaking rate. For Aims 2 and 3, the features were compared between groups and rate conditions, respectiely. Results: For Aim 1, the modulation features combined were moderately to strongly correlated with intelligibility (R² = .51–.53) and intelligible speaking rate (R² = .63–.73). For Aim 2, intra-articulator modulation was impaired in ALS, manifested by moderate-to-large decreases in modulation depth at all timescales and cross-timescale phase synchronization. Interarticulator modulation was relatively unaffected. For Aim 3, voluntary rate reduction improved several intra-articulator modulation features identified as being susceptible to the disease effect in individuals with ALS. Conclusions: Disrupted temporal patterning of articulation, presumably reflecting impaired articulatory entrainment to linguistic rhythms, may contribute to functional speech declines in ALS. These impairments tend to be improved through voluntary rate reduction, possibly by reshaping the temporal template of motor plans to better accommodate the disease-related neuromechanical constraints in the articulatory system. These findings shed light on a novel perspective toward global timing–based motor speech assessment and rehabilitation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.