Affiliation:
1. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Bowling Green State University, OH
2. School of Human Movement, Sport, & Leisure Studies, Bowling Green State University, OH
Abstract
Purpose
Prior work has demonstrated that competing tasks impact habitual speech production. The purpose of this investigation was to quantify the extent to which clear and loud speech are affected by concurrent performance of an attention-demanding task.
Method
Speech kinematics and acoustics were collected while participants spoke using habitual, loud, and clear speech styles. The styles were performed in isolation and while performing a secondary tracking task.
Results
Compared to the habitual style, speakers exhibited expected increases in lip aperture range of motion and speech intensity for the clear and loud styles. During concurrent visuomotor tracking, there was a decrease in lip aperture range of motion and speech intensity for the habitual style. Tracking performance during habitual speech did not differ from single-task tracking. For loud and clear speech, speakers retained the gains in speech intensity and range of motion, respectively, while concurrently tracking. A reduction in tracking performance was observed during concurrent loud and clear speech, compared to tracking alone.
Conclusions
These data suggest that loud and clear speech may help to mitigate motor interference associated with concurrent performance of an attention-demanding task. Additionally, reductions in tracking accuracy observed during concurrent loud and clear speech may suggest that these higher effort speaking styles require greater attentional resources than habitual speech.
Publisher
American Speech Language Hearing Association
Subject
Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Reference67 articles.
1. Effects of interlocutor distance, multi-talker background noise, and a concurrent manual task on speech intensity in Parkinson's disease;Adams S. G.;Journal of Medical Speech-Language Pathology,2010
2. Bidirectional Interference Between Speech and Nonspeech Tasks in Younger, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults
3. Kinematic Features of Jaw and Lips Distinguish Symptomatic From Presymptomatic Stages of Bulbar Decline in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
4. The use of a dual-task paradigm for assessing speech intelligibility in clients with Parkinson disease;Bunton K.;Journal of Medical Speech-Language Pathology,2008
5. Changes to Articulatory Kinematics in Response to Loudness Cues in Individuals With Parkinson’s Disease
Cited by
9 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献