Evidence for Auditory-Motor Impairment in Individuals With Hyperfunctional Voice Disorders

Author:

Stepp Cara E.123,Lester-Smith Rosemary A.1,Abur Defne1,Daliri Ayoub1,Pieter Noordzij J.13,Lupiani Ashling A.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, Boston University, Massachusetts

2. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Boston University, Massachusetts

3. Department of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery, Boston University School of Medicine, Massachusetts

Abstract

Purpose The vocal auditory-motor control of individuals with hyperfunctional voice disorders was examined using a sensorimotor adaptation paradigm. Method Nine individuals with hyperfunctional voice disorders and 9 individuals with typical voices produced sustained vowels over 160 trials in 2 separate conditions: (a) while experiencing gradual upward perturbations in the fundamental frequency ( f o ) of their auditory feedback (shift-up) and (b) under no auditory perturbation (control). The shift-up condition consisted of 4 ordered (fixed) phases: baseline (no perturbation), ramp (gradual increases in heard f o ), hold (a consistently higher heard f o ), and after-effect (no perturbation). Adaptive responses were defined as the difference in produced f o during control and shift-up conditions. Results Adaptive responses were significantly different between groups. Individuals with typical voices generally showed compensatory adaptive responses, with decreased f o during the ramp and hold phases. Conversely, many individuals with hyperfunctional voice disorders instead displayed the opposite effect by following the direction of the perturbation. When f o was experimentally increased, speakers further increased their f o . Conclusion Results indicate that some individuals diagnosed with hyperfunctional voice disorders have disrupted auditory-motor control, suggesting atypical neurological function. These findings may eventually allow for the development of new interventions for hyperfunctional voice disorders.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference40 articles.

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