20 results on '"Tyson G. Harmon"'
Search Results
2. Effects of Background Noise on Speech and Language in Young Adults
- Author
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Kacy Chapman, Brenna Scadden Nelson, Christopher Dromey, and Tyson G. Harmon
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Speech Acoustics ,Linguistics and Language ,Speech Intelligibility ,Speech fluency ,Affect (psychology) ,Language and Linguistics ,Background noise ,Young Adult ,Speech and Hearing ,Speech Perception ,Humans ,Speech ,Young adult ,Noise ,Psychology ,Language ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Purpose The aim of this study was to investigate how different types of background noise that differ in their level of linguistic content affect speech acoustics, speech fluency, and language production for young adult speakers when performing a monologue discourse task. Method Forty young adults monologued by responding to open-ended questions in a silent baseline and five background noise conditions (debate, movie dialogue, contemporary music, classical music, and pink noise). Measures related to speech acoustics (intensity and frequency), speech fluency (speech rate, pausing, and disfluencies), and language production (lexical, morphosyntactic, and macrolinguistic structure) were analyzed and compared across conditions. Participants also reported on which conditions they perceived as more distracting. Results All noise conditions resulted in some change to spoken language compared with the silent baseline. Effects on speech acoustics were consistent with expected changes due to the Lombard effect (e.g., increased intensity and fundamental frequency). Effects on speech fluency showed decreased pausing and increased disfluencies. Several background noise conditions also seemed to interfere with language production. Conclusions Findings suggest that young adults present with both compensatory and interference effects when speaking in noise. Several adjustments may facilitate intelligibility when noise is present and help both speaker and listener maintain attention on the production. Other adjustments provide evidence that background noise eliciting linguistic interference has the potential to degrade spoken language even for healthy young adults, because of increased cognitive demands.
- Published
- 2021
3. Everyday communication challenges in aphasia: descriptions of experiences and coping strategies
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Tyson G. Harmon
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Linguistics and Language ,LPN and LVN ,Language and Linguistics ,030507 speech-language pathology & audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neurology ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Aphasia ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Background: Everyday communication often occurs in situations that pose high attentional and social demands. People with aphasia have reported perceiving greater challenge communicating in these si...
- Published
- 2020
4. How Responsiveness From a Communication Partner Affects Story Retell in Aphasia: Quantitative and Qualitative Findings
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Antoine Bailliard, Katarina L. Haley, Adam Jacks, and Tyson G. Harmon
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Adult ,Male ,Linguistics and Language ,Affect (psychology) ,Severity of Illness Index ,Feedback ,Developmental psychology ,030507 speech-language pathology & audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Speech and Hearing ,Fluency ,Interpersonal relationship ,0302 clinical medicine ,Aphasia ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,Interpersonal Relations ,Qualitative Research ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Backchannel ,Narration ,Middle Aged ,Speech Articulation Tests ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Case-Control Studies ,Anxiety ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Stress, Psychological ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Qualitative research ,Spoken language - Abstract
Purpose Because people with aphasia (PWA) frequently interact with partners who are unresponsive to their communicative attempts, we investigated how partner responsiveness affects quantitative measures of spoken language and subjective reactions during story retell. Method A quantitative study and a qualitative study were conducted. In Study 1, participants with aphasia and controls retold short stories to a communication partner who indicated interest through supportive backchannel responses (responsive) and another who indicated disinterest through unsupportive backchannel responses (unresponsive). Story retell accuracy, delivery speed, and ratings of psychological stress were measured and compared. In Study 2, participants completed semistructured interviews about their story retell experience, which were recorded, transcribed, and coded using qualitative analysis software. Results Quantitative results revealed increased psychological stress and decreased delivery speed across all participant groups during the unresponsive partner condition. Effects on delivery speed were more consistent for controls than participants with aphasia. Qualitative results revealed that participants with aphasia were more attuned to unresponsive partner behaviors than controls and reported stronger and more frequent emotional reactions. Partner responsiveness also affected how PWA perceived and coped with the communication experience. Conclusions Combined quantitative and qualitative findings suggest that, while unresponsive communication partners may not have robust effects on spoken language, they elicit strong emotional reactions from PWA and affect their communication experience. These findings support the need for communication partner training and suggest that training PWA on emotion regulation or relaxation techniques may help assuage their anxiety during socially challenging everyday communication and increase social participation. Supplemental Material https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.11368028
- Published
- 2020
5. Effects of Positive and Negative Emotions on Picture Naming for People With Mild-to-Moderate Aphasia: A Preliminary Investigation
- Author
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Tyson G. Harmon, Courtney Nielsen, Corinne Loveridge, and Camille Williams
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Speech and Hearing ,Linguistics and Language ,Young Adult ,Emotions ,Aphasia ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,Language and Linguistics ,Aged ,Language ,Semantics - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of the study is to investigate how emotional arousal and valence affect confrontational naming accuracy and response time (RT) in people with mild-to-moderate aphasia compared with adults without aphasia. We hypothesized that negative and positive emotions would facilitate naming for people with aphasia (PWA) but lead to slower responses for adults with no aphasia. Method: Eight participants with mild-to-moderate aphasia, 15 older adults (OAs), and 17 young adults (YAs) completed a confrontational naming task across three conditions (positive, negative, and neutral) in an ABA (where A = neutral and B = negative) case series design. Immediately following each naming condition, participants self-reported their perceived arousal and pleasure. Accuracy and RT were measured and compared. Results: As expected, PWA performed significantly less accurately and with longer RTs than both YA and OA groups across all conditions. However, opposite our hypothesis for the aphasia group, the negative condition resulted in decreased accuracy for the aphasia and the OA group and increased RT across all groups. No statistically significant differences were found between the positive and any other condition. Participants with aphasia who demonstrated an effect in the negative condition were observed to produce a larger proportion of semantically related errors than any other error types. Conclusions: Findings suggest that strong negative emotions can interfere with semantic–lexical processing by diverting attentional resources to emotion regulation. Both clinicians and researchers should be aware of the potential influence of negative stimuli and negative emotional states on language performance for PWA, and these effects should be disentangled in future research. Further research should also be conducted with a larger number of participants with aphasia across a broader range of severity to replicate and extend findings. Supplemental Material: https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.19119356
- Published
- 2022
6. Repeated word production is inconsistent in both aphasia and apraxia of speech
- Author
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Kevin T. Cunningham, Tyson G. Harmon, Jessica D. Richardson, Adam Jacks, Peter E. Turkeltaub, and Katarina L. Haley
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Linguistics and Language ,Phonetic transcription ,LPN and LVN ,medicine.disease ,Apraxia ,Language and Linguistics ,Paraphasia ,Article ,030507 speech-language pathology & audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neurology ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Consistency (statistics) ,Aphasia ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Word production ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
PURPOSE: There is persistent uncertainty about whether sound error consistency is a valid criterion for differentiating between apraxia of speech (AOS) and aphasia with phonemic paraphasia. The purpose of this study was to determine whether speakers with a profile of aphasia and AOS differ in error consistency from speakers with aphasia who do not have AOS. By accounting for differences in overall severity and using a sample size well over three times that of the largest study on the topic to date, our ambition was to resolve the existing controversy. METHOD: We analyzed speech samples from 171 speakers with aphasia and completed error consistency analysis for 137 of them. The experimental task was to repeat four multisyllabic words five times successively. Phonetic transcriptions were coded for four consistency indices (two at the sound-level and two at the word-level). We then used quantitative metrics to assign participants to four diagnostic groups (one aphasia plus AOS group, one aphasia only group, and two groups with intermediate speech profiles). Potential consistency differences were examined with ANCOVA, with error frequency as a continuous covariate. RESULTS: Error frequency was a strong predictor for three of the four consistency metrics. The magnitude of consistency for participants with AOS was either similar or lower compared to that of participants with aphasia only. Despite excellent transcription reliability and moderate to excellent coding reliability, three of the four consistency indices showed limited measurement reliability. DISCUSSION: People with AOS and people with aphasia often produce inconsistent variants of errors when they are asked to repeat challenging words several times sequentially. The finding that error consistency is similar or lower in aphasia with AOS than in aphasia without AOS is incompatible with recommendations that high error consistency be used as a diagnostic criterion for AOS. At the same time, group differences in the opposite direction are not sufficiently systematic to warrant use for differential diagnosis between aphasia with AOS and aphasia with phonemic paraphasia. Greater attention should be given to error propagation when estimating reliability of derived measurements.
- Published
- 2021
7. Listener Perceptions of Simulated Fluent Speech in Nonfluent Aphasia Aphasiology
- Author
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Tyson G, Harmon, Adam, Jacks, Katarina L, Haley, and Richard A, Faldowski
- Subjects
Article - Abstract
BACKGROUND: People with aphasia (PWA) are frequently perceived less favorably by listeners than their peers. These perceptions include incorrect assumptions that can prevent successful social interactions. While communication partner training has been shown to improve social outcomes related to the listener (see e.g., Kagan, Black, Duchan, Simmons-Mackie, & Square, 2001), changing the verbal output of PWA may also yield more favorable listener perceptions about the speech, speaker, and their own affective response. We investigated the effects of artificially altered fluency (i.e., simulated fluency) on listeners’ subjective impressions. AIMS: The purpose of the study was to (1) confirm that listeners perceive PWA less favorably than their neurologically healthy peers and (2) determine the effects of simulated fluency on listener perceptions about PWA. METHOD & PROCEDURES: Thirty-eight listeners heard nine narrative monologue language samples from three conditions (i.e., speakers with nonfluent aphasia, simulated fluent samples from the same speakers, and neurologically healthy speakers). Listeners responded to a nine-item questionnaire that probed perceptions about speech output, speaker attributes, and listener feelings. OUTCOMES & RESULTS: Listeners perceived PWA less favorably than their neurologically healthy peers. Simulated fluency yielded more positive listener perceptions for all questionnaire items except speech intelligibility, which was unchanged by simulated fluency. CONCLUSIONS: Simulated fluency improved listener perceptions of PWA significantly, indicating that speech fluency may be a socially valid treatment target in aphasia. Beyond direct training of communication partners, changing the verbal output of aphasic speech can also yield more positive listener perceptions of PWA.
- Published
- 2021
8. Spoken Discourse Assessment and Analysis in Aphasia: An International Survey of Current Practices
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Tyson G. Harmon, Amy E. Ramage, Manaswita Dutta, Davida Fromm, Brielle C. Stark, Angela Roberts, Lucy Bryant, and Laura L. Murray
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Speech-Language Pathology & Audiology ,Linguistics and Language ,1103 Clinical Sciences, 1702 Cognitive Sciences, 2004 Linguistics ,Standardization ,Psychometrics ,Discourse analysis ,International survey ,Language and Linguistics ,Linguistics ,Speech and Hearing ,Aphasia ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Language - Abstract
Purpose Spoken discourse analysis is commonly employed in the assessment and treatment of people living with aphasia, yet there is no standardization in assessment, analysis, or reporting procedures, thereby precluding comparison/meta-analyses of data and hindering replication of findings. An important first step is to identify current practices in collecting and analyzing spoken discourse in aphasia. Thus, this study surveyed current practices, with the goal of working toward standardizing spoken discourse assessment first in research settings with subsequent implementation into clinical settings. Method A mixed-methods (quantitative and qualitative) survey was publicized to researchers and clinicians around the globe who have collected and/or analyzed spoken discourse data in aphasia. The survey data were collected between September and November 2019. Results Of the 201 individuals who consented to participate, 189 completed all mandatory questions in the survey (with fewer completing nonmandatory response questions). The majority of respondents reported barriers to utilizing discourse including transcription, coding, and analysis. The most common barrier was time (e.g., lack of time). Respondents also indicated that there was a lack of, and a need for, psychometric properties and normative data for spoken discourse use in the assessment and treatment of persons with aphasia. Quantitative and qualitative results are described in detail. Conclusions The current survey study evaluated spoken discourse methods in aphasia across research and clinical settings. Findings from this study will be used to guide development of process standardization in spoken discourse and for the creation of a psychometric and normative property database. Supplemental Material https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.16639510
- Published
- 2021
9. Speech Fluency in Acquired Apraxia of Speech During Narrative Discourse: Group Comparisons and Dual-Task Effects
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Adam Jacks, Katarina L. Haley, and Tyson G. Harmon
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Adult ,Male ,Linguistics and Language ,Speech production ,Speech perception ,Apraxias ,Apraxia ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Speech and Hearing ,Fluency ,0302 clinical medicine ,Speech Production Measurement ,Aphasia ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Narrative ,Connected speech ,Aged ,Speech Intelligibility ,05 social sciences ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Case-Control Studies ,Speech Perception ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neurotypical ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Purpose Slowed speech and interruptions to the flow of connected speech are common in aphasia. These features are also observed during dual-task performance for neurotypical adults. The purposes of this study were to determine (a) whether indices of fluency related to cognitive–linguistic versus motor processing would differ between speakers with aphasia plus apraxia of speech (AOS) and speakers with aphasia only and (b) whether cognitive load reduces fluency in speakers with aphasia with and without AOS. Method Fourteen speakers with aphasia (7 with AOS) and 7 neurotypical controls retold short stories alone (single task) and while simultaneously distinguishing between a high and a low tone (dual task). Their narrative samples were analyzed for speech fluency according to sample duration, speech rate, pause/fill time, and repetitions per syllable. Results As expected, both speaker groups with aphasia spoke slower and with more pauses than the neurotypical controls. The speakers with AOS produced more repetitions and longer samples than controls, but they did not differ on these measures from the speakers with aphasia without AOS. Relative to the single-task condition, the dual-task condition increased the duration of pauses and fillers for all groups but reduced speaking rate only for the control group. Sample duration and frequency of repetitions did not change in response to cognitive load. Conclusions Speech output in aphasia becomes less fluent when speakers have to engage in simultaneous tasks, as is typical in everyday conversation. Although AOS may lead to more sound and syllable repetitions than normal, speaking tasks other than narrative discourse might better capture this specific type of disfluency. Future research is needed to confirm and expand these preliminary findings. Supplemental Material https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.8847845
- Published
- 2019
10. Automated Speech Recognition in Adult Stroke Survivors: Comparing Human and Computer Transcriptions
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Katarina L. Haley, Gary Bishop, Adam Jacks, and Tyson G. Harmon
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Adult ,Male ,Linguistics and Language ,genetic structures ,Apraxias ,Speech recognition ,Intelligibility (communication) ,Apraxia ,Language and Linguistics ,Speech and Hearing ,Transcription (linguistics) ,Aphasia ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Survivors ,Speech transcription ,Stroke survivor ,Aged ,Speech Intelligibility ,Stroke Rehabilitation ,Middle Aged ,LPN and LVN ,medicine.disease ,Regression ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Speech Recognition Software ,Psychology ,Sentence - Abstract
Objective: Speech sound errors are common in people with a variety of communication disorders and can result in impaired message transmission to listeners. Valid and reliable metrics exist to quantify this problem, but they are rarely used in clinical settings due to the time-intensive nature of speech transcription by humans. Automated speech recognition (ASR) technologies have advanced substantially in recent years, enabling them to serve as realistic proxies for human listeners. This study aimed to determine how closely transcription scores from human listeners correspond to scores from an ASR system. Patients and Methods: Sentence recordings from 10 stroke survivors with aphasia and apraxia of speech were transcribed orthographically by 3 listeners and a web-based ASR service. Adjusted transcription scores were calculated for all samples based on accuracy of transcribed content words. Results: As expected, transcription scores were significantly higher for the humans than for ASR. However, intraclass correlations revealed excellent agreement among the humans and ASR systems, and the systematically lower scores for computer speech recognition were effectively equalized simply by adding the regression intercept. Conclusions: The results suggest the clinical feasibility of supplementing or substituting human transcriptions with computer-generated scores, though extension to other speech disorders requires further research.
- Published
- 2019
11. Effects of an Interdisciplinary Communication Partner Training Program on Student Learning
- Author
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Mei-Ling, Lin, Tyson G, Harmon, Gabrielle, Scronce, and Adam, Jacks
- Subjects
Adult ,Speech-Language Pathology ,Universities ,Aphasia ,Humans ,Interdisciplinary Communication ,Students - Abstract
Communication partner training (CPT) involves educating conversation partners to implement communication strategies that facilitate improved interactions with people with aphasia (PWA). This study aimed to investigate (1) whether a CPT program increased the knowledge and confidence of students with and without a communication disorders background and (2) the differential effects of this training on students from different allied health disciplines.Quasi-experimental design study with 6 adult volunteers with aphasia and 36 students (18 speech-language pathology [SLP] students and 18 physical therapy/occupational therapy [PT/OT] students). The CPT program was provided twice (in 2015 and 2016) as a single seminar at an American university.All students reported increased confidence in communicating with PWA and were able to identify a greater number of appropriate communication strategies after the CPT than they could identify before the training. The SLP students demonstrated greater aphasia knowledge than the PT/OT students prior to training; only the PT/OT students reported increased knowledge about aphasia after training.Involvement of PWA in CPT programs may be particularly important in enabling students to develop confidence in communicating with PWA. Practice opportunities with PWA can be provided as early as the beginning of didactic coursework through an interdisciplinary CPT program.
- Published
- 2021
12. Effects of background noise on the speech acoustics of people with aphasia
- Author
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Kirsten Dixon, Christopher Dromey, Tracianne B. Neilsen, and Tyson G. Harmon
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Background noise ,Speech Acoustics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Aphasia ,medicine ,Selective attention ,Audiology ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology - Published
- 2021
13. Life activity choices by people with aphasia: repeated interviews and proxy agreement
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Tyson G. Harmon, Karen L. McCulloch, Richard A. Faldowski, Jennifer L. Womack, and Katarina L. Haley
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Occupational therapy ,Linguistics and Language ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychotherapist ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Language and Linguistics ,Meaningful life ,Life activity ,Proxy (climate) ,Business process discovery ,030507 speech-language pathology & audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Aphasia ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Goal setting ,Rehabilitation ,LPN and LVN ,Neurology ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background: Person-centered rehabilitation requires that meaningful life activities are identified on a case-by-case basis, but the discovery process can be inaccessible for clients with aphasia. C...
- Published
- 2018
14. Proactive social validation of methods and procedures used for training speech production in aphasia
- Author
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Lucy Hardy, Tyson G. Harmon, and Katarina L. Haley
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Linguistics and Language ,Speech production ,Applied psychology ,Treatment goals ,LPN and LVN ,Language and Linguistics ,Developmental psychology ,030507 speech-language pathology & audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Qualitative analysis ,Neurology ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Aphasia ,Social validity ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Goal setting ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background: Social validation evaluates the importance and acceptability of treatment goals, procedures, and outcomes. Previous studies for treatments that train speech production in aphasia have applied social validation during the posttreatment period or to treatment protocols that are already fully developed.Aims: The purposes of this study were to (1) examine the social validity of goals and procedures experienced in speech production treatment for people with aphasia and (2) evaluate the feasibility of procedural choice-making during such tasks.Method: Seven people with aphasia and eight speech–language pathologists were interviewed about previous treatment that targeted speech production. Participants were also observed and/or provided feedback following a simulated practice experience or description of practice techniques that were part of a treatment approach under development. Detailed field notes were obtained and analyzed.Results: Qualitative analysis revealed four themes: (1) experienc...
- Published
- 2017
15. Dual-Task Effects on Story Retell for Participants With Moderate, Mild, or No Aphasia: Quantitative and Qualitative Findings
- Author
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Antoine Bailliard, Tyson G. Harmon, Adam Jacks, and Katarina L. Haley
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Linguistics and Language ,Coping (psychology) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Audiology ,Severity of Illness Index ,Language and Linguistics ,Speech and Hearing ,Fluency ,Aphasia ,Task Performance and Analysis ,medicine ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,Speech ,Qualitative Research ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Narration ,Verbal Behavior ,Cognition ,Middle Aged ,Executive functions ,Stroke ,Brain Injuries ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Thematic analysis ,Psychology ,Neurotypical ,Spoken language - Abstract
Purpose The aims of the study were to determine dual-task effects on content accuracy, delivery speed, and perceived effort during narrative discourse in people with moderate, mild, or no aphasia and to explore subjective reactions to retelling a story with a concurrent task. Method Two studies (1 quantitative and 1 qualitative) were conducted. In Study 1, participants with mild or moderate aphasia and neurotypical controls retold short stories in isolation and while simultaneously distinguishing between high and low tones. Story retell accuracy (speech productivity and efficiency), speed (speech rate, repetitions, and pauses), and perceived effort were measured and compared. In Study 2, participants completed semistructured interviews about their story retell experience. These interviews were recorded, transcribed orthographically, and coded qualitatively using thematic analysis. Results The dual task interfered more with spoken language of people with aphasia than controls, but different speed–accuracy trade-off patterns were noted. Participants in the moderate aphasia group reduced accuracy with little alteration to speed, whereas participants in the mild aphasia group maintained accuracy and reduced their speed. Participants in both groups also reported more negative emotional and behavioral reactions to the dual-task condition than their neurotypical peers. Intentional strategies for coping with the cognitive demands of the dual-task condition were only reported by participants with mild aphasia. Conclusion The findings suggest that, although communicating with a competing task is more difficult for people with aphasia than neurotypical controls, participants with mild aphasia may be better able to cope with cognitively demanding communication situations than participants with moderate aphasia. Supplemental Material https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.8233391
- Published
- 2019
16. Supporting Confidence and Participation for People with Aphasia Through Student Interaction: A Descriptive Study on the Effects of an Interdisciplinary Campus Program
- Author
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Tyson G, Harmon, Mei-Ling, Lin, Gabrielle, Scronce, and Adam, Jacks
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Adult ,Male ,Universities ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Aphasia ,Humans ,Female ,Curriculum ,Middle Aged ,Social Participation ,Students ,Self Concept - Abstract
Decreased social participation is one consequence of aphasia that can lead to poor psychological health and reduced quality of life. Involving people with aphasia in advocacy efforts may be one solution for increasing their social participation. The present study investigated the benefits of a campus program for three people with mild aphasia who were involved in educating allied health students about aphasia and training them to communicate with those who have aphasia.Three participants with aphasia shared their stories and interacted with interdisciplinary students in two seminar sessions aimed at educating students about aphasia and helping them learn strategies for supportive communication with people with aphasia. A mixed-method analysis approach was used to assess the effects of the program. Quantitative data were obtained via pre- and post-program survey questionnaires. Qualitative data were acquired through focus group interviews.Scores on questionnaires related to communication confidence or social participation were greater following program participation for all three participants with aphasia and quality of communication life scores were greater for one. Thematic coding of focus group data confirmed that participants with aphasia and their spouses perceived benefits to program participation including increased social access and improved self-concept.Findings suggest that participation in community education efforts may lead to increased social participation and communication confidence for people with aphasia.
- Published
- 2019
17. Listener perceptions of simulated fluent speech in nonfluent aphasia
- Author
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Adam Jacks, Katarina L. Haley, Richard A. Faldowski, and Tyson G. Harmon
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Linguistics and Language ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Language and Linguistics ,Nonfluent aphasia ,030507 speech-language pathology & audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fluency ,0302 clinical medicine ,Aphasia ,Perception ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Narrative ,Affective response ,media_common ,LPN and LVN ,Neurology ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Speech-Language Pathology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Background: People with aphasia (PWA) are frequently perceived less favourably by listeners than their peers. These perceptions include incorrect assumptions that can prevent successful social interactions. While communication partner training has been shown to improve social outcomes related to the listener, changing the verbal output of PWA may also yield more favourable listener perceptions about the speech, speaker, and their own affective response. We investigated the effects of artificially altered fluency (i.e., simulated fluency) on listeners’ subjective impressions.Aims: The purpose of the study was to (1) confirm that listeners perceive PWA less favourably than their neurologically healthy peers and (2) determine the effects of simulated fluency on listener perceptions about PWA.Methods & Procedures: Thirty-eight listeners heard nine narrative monologue language samples from three conditions (i.e., speakers with nonfluent aphasia, simulated fluent samples from the same speakers, and neurological...
- Published
- 2015
18. Visual analog rating of mood by people with aphasia
- Author
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Sharon Wallace Williams, Katarina L. Haley, Jennifer L. Womack, and Tyson G. Harmon
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Adult ,Male ,Psychometrics ,Visual analogue scale ,media_common.quotation_subject ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Aphasia ,medicine ,Humans ,Stroke survivor ,Aged ,media_common ,Community and Home Care ,Rehabilitation ,Middle Aged ,Affect ,Mood ,Feeling ,Correlation analysis ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Considerable attention has been given to the identification of depression in stroke survivors with aphasia, but there is more limited information about other mood states. Visual analog scales are often used to collect subjective information from people with aphasia. However, the validity of these methods for communicating about mood has not been established in people with moderately to severely impaired language.The dual purposes of this study were to characterize the relative endorsement of negative and positive mood states in people with chronic aphasia after stroke and to examine congruent validity for visual analog rating methods for people with a range of aphasia severity.Twenty-three left-hemisphere stroke survivors with aphasia were asked to indicate their present mood by using two published visual analog rating methods. The congruence between the methods was estimated through correlation analysis, and scores for different moods were compared.Endorsement was significantly stronger for "happy" than for mood states with negative valence. At the same time, several participants displayed pronounced negative mood compared to previously published norms for neurologically healthy adults. Results from the two rating methods were moderately and positively correlated.Positive mood is prominent in people with aphasia who are in the chronic stage of recovery after stroke, but negative moods can also be salient and individual presentations are diverse. Visual analog rating methods are valid methods for discussing mood with people with aphasia; however, design optimization should be explored.
- Published
- 2015
19. Recovering With Acquired Apraxia of Speech: The First 2 Years
- Author
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Adam Jacks, Katarina L. Haley, Tyson G. Harmon, and Jennifer N. Shafer
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Linguistics and Language ,Speech production ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Speech perception ,Apraxias ,Intelligibility (communication) ,Audiology ,Apraxia ,Speech Disorders ,030507 speech-language pathology & audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Speech and Hearing ,0302 clinical medicine ,Speech Production Measurement ,Phonetics ,Brain Injuries, Traumatic ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,Speech ,Prosody ,Lived experience ,Recovery of Function ,medicine.disease ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Purpose This study was intended to document speech recovery for 1 person with acquired apraxia of speech quantitatively and on the basis of her lived experience. Method The second author sustained a traumatic brain injury that resulted in acquired apraxia of speech. Over a 2-year period, she documented her recovery through 22 video-recorded monologues. We analyzed these monologues using a combination of auditory perceptual, acoustic, and qualitative methods. Results Recovery was evident for all quantitative variables examined. For speech sound production, the recovery was most prominent during the first 3 months, but slower improvement was evident for many months. Measures of speaking rate, fluency, and prosody changed more gradually throughout the entire period. A qualitative analysis of topics addressed in the monologues was consistent with the quantitative speech recovery and indicated a subjective dynamic relationship between accuracy and rate, an observation that several factors made speech sound production variable, and a persisting need for cognitive effort while speaking. Conclusions Speech features improved over an extended time, but the recovery trajectories differed, indicating dynamic reorganization of the underlying speech production system. The relationship among speech dimensions should be examined in other cases and in population samples. The combination of quantitative and qualitative analysis methods offers advantages for understanding clinically relevant aspects of recovery.
- Published
- 2016
20. Learning by Doing
- Author
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Anna Weinberg, Tyson G. Harmon, and Brenda Everett Mitchell
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Speech and Hearing ,Medical education ,Work (electrical) ,medicine ,Dementia ,medicine.disease ,Psychology ,Learning-by-doing (economics) - Published
- 2016
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