Discriminating Dysarthria Type From Envelope Modulation Spectra

Author:

Liss Julie M.1,LeGendre Sue2,Lotto Andrew J.2

Affiliation:

1. Arizona State University, Tempe

2. University of Arizona, Tucson

Abstract

Purpose Previous research demonstrated the ability of temporally based rhythm metrics to distinguish among dysarthrias with different prosodic deficit profiles (J. M. Liss et al., 2009). The authors examined whether comparable results could be obtained by an automated analysis of speech envelope modulation spectra (EMS), which quantifies the rhythmicity of speech within specified frequency bands. Method EMS was conducted on sentences produced by 43 speakers with 1 of 4 types of dysarthria and healthy controls. The EMS consisted of the spectra of the slow-rate (up to 10 Hz) amplitude modulations of the full signal and 7 octave bands ranging in center frequency from 125 to 8000 Hz. Six variables were calculated for each band relating to peak frequency and amplitude and relative energy above, below, and in the region of 4 Hz. Discriminant function analyses (DFA) determined which sets of predictor variables best discriminated between and among groups. Results Each of 6 DFAs identified 2–6 of the 48 predictor variables. These variables achieved 84%–100% classification accuracy for group membership. Conclusions Dysarthrias can be characterized by quantifiable temporal patterns in acoustic output. Because EMS analysis is automated and requires no editing or linguistic assumptions, it shows promise as a clinical and research tool.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference26 articles.

1. The temporal properties of spoken Japanese are similar to those of English;Arai T.;Proceedings of Eurospeech, Rhodes, Greece,1997

2. Rhythmic constraints on stress timing in English;Cummins F.;Journal of Phonetics,1998

3. Effect of temporal envelope smearing on speech reception;Drullman R.;Journal of the Acoustical Society of America,1994

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