Acoustic Measures of Dysphonia in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

Author:

Maffei Marc F.1ORCID,Green Jordan R.12ORCID,Murton Olivia1,Yunusova Yana345ORCID,Rowe Hannah P.1ORCID,Wehbe Farah34,Diana Kathleen6,Nicholson Katharine6,Berry James D.6,Connaghan Kathryn P.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, MGH Institute of Health Professions, Boston, MA

2. Speech and Hearing Bioscience and Technology Program, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA

3. Department of Speech-Language Pathology, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada

4. Hurvitz Brain Sciences Program, Sunnybrook Research Institute, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

5. Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, University Health Network, Ontario, Canada

6. Department of Neurology, Neurological Clinical Research Institute, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston

Abstract

Purpose: Identifying efficacious measures to characterize dysphonia in complex neurodegenerative diseases is key to optimal assessment and intervention. This study evaluates the validity and sensitivity of acoustic features of phonatory disruption in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Method: Forty-nine individuals with ALS (40–79 years old) were audio-recorded while producing a sustained vowel and continuous speech. Perturbation/noise-based (jitter, shimmer, and harmonics-to-noise ratio) and cepstral/spectral (cepstral peak prominence, low–high spectral ratio, and related features) acoustic measures were extracted. The criterion validity of each measure was assessed using correlations with perceptual voice ratings provided by three speech-language pathologists. Diagnostic accuracy of the acoustic features was evaluated using area-under-the-curve analysis. Results: Perturbation/noise-based and cepstral/spectral features extracted from /a/ were significantly correlated with listener ratings of roughness, breathiness, strain, and overall dysphonia. Fewer and smaller correlations between cepstral/spectral measures and perceptual ratings were observed for the continuous speech task, although post hoc analyses revealed stronger correlations in speakers with less perceptually impaired speech. Area-under-the-curve analyses revealed that multiple acoustic features, particularly from the sustained vowel task, adequately differentiated between individuals with ALS with and without perceptually dysphonic voices. Conclusions: Our findings support using both perturbation/noise-based and cepstral/spectral measures of sustained /a/ to assess phonatory quality in ALS. Results from the continuous speech task suggest that multisubsystem involvement impacts cepstral/spectral analyses in complex motor speech disorders such as ALS. Further investigation of the validity and sensitivity of cepstral/spectral measures during continuous speech in ALS is warranted.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference93 articles.

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