Quantification and Systematic Characterization of Stuttering-Like Disfluencies in Acquired Apraxia of Speech

Author:

Bailey Dallin J.12,Blomgren Michael2,DeLong Catharine12,Berggren Kiera12,Wambaugh Julie L.12

Affiliation:

1. Veterans Affairs Salt Lake City Health Care System, UT

2. University of Utah, Salt Lake City

Abstract

Purpose The purpose of this article is to quantify and describe stuttering-like disfluencies in speakers with acquired apraxia of speech (AOS), utilizing the Lidcombe Behavioural Data Language (LBDL). Additional purposes include measuring test–retest reliability and examining the effect of speech sample type on disfluency rates. Method Two types of speech samples were elicited from 20 persons with AOS and aphasia: repetition of mono- and multisyllabic words from a protocol for assessing AOS (Duffy, 2013), and connected speech tasks (Nicholas & Brookshire, 1993). Sampling was repeated at 1 and 4 weeks following initial sampling. Stuttering-like disfluencies were coded using the LBDL, which is a taxonomy that focuses on motoric aspects of stuttering. Results Disfluency rates ranged from 0% to 13.1% for the connected speech task and from 0% to 17% for the word repetition task. There was no significant effect of speech sampling time on disfluency rate in the connected speech task, but there was a significant effect of time for the word repetition task. There was no significant effect of speech sample type. Conclusions Speakers demonstrated both major types of stuttering-like disfluencies as categorized by the LBDL (fixed postures and repeated movements). Connected speech samples yielded more reliable tallies over repeated measurements. Suggestions are made for modifying the LBDL for use in AOS in order to further add to systematic descriptions of motoric disfluencies in this disorder.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Otorhinolaryngology

Reference21 articles.

1. Test-retest stability of measures of connected speech in aphasia;Brookshire R. H.;Clinical Aphasiology,1994

2. Characteristics of speech disfluency in Parkinson disease

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