Affiliation:
1. Department of Communication Science and Disorders, School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, PA
Abstract
Purpose:
This study examines communicative congruence and communicative dysphoria in adults who deny having a voice disorder.
Communicative congruence
is the degree to which a person's communication is consistent with their sense of self/identity.
Communicative dysphoria
is the psychological entropy resulting from communicative
in
congruence. We propose that these experiences may influence patients' psychosocial well-being and are thus relevant to the field of speech-language pathology. We hypothesized that both constructs would be normally distributed with an inverse relationship. We also hypothesized that communicative congruence would predict scores on the Center for Epidemiological Studies–Depression (CES-D) scale, subscales of the Big Five Aspect Scales (BFAS; a personality measure), and achieve convergent validity with the Vocal Congruence Scale (VCS).
Method:
Participants (adults 18–70 years) completed the BFAS, CES-D, VCS, and the Voice Handicap Index–10 (VHI-10) before recording a series of speech tasks. Participants' recordings were played back while they responded to questions probing their communicative congruence and communicative dysphoria.
Results:
The 196 participants were predominantly female (67.3%) and cisgender (96.4%). Communicative congruence was negatively skewed, and communicative dysphoria was normally distributed. Both variables significantly related to each other: More
in
congruence was associated with more dysphoria. Communicative congruence was inversely related to CES-D scores. The personality metatrait Plasticity related to communicative congruence, as did the domain of Extraversion and the aspects Withdrawal, Enthusiasm, and Assertiveness. Communicative congruence achieved high convergent validity with the VCS.
Conclusions:
Counter to our hypothesis, participants reported more congruence than incongruence, but all other hypotheses were supported. Participants who reported
in
congruence were more likely to report symptoms of depression. These findings suggest that even in a predominantly cisgender cohort, some individuals' mental well-being might relate to how well their communication aligns with their identity. This work may inform future investigations into these constructs and their effects on voice therapy outcomes.
Supplemental Material:
https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.20739967
Publisher
American Speech Language Hearing Association
Subject
Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Reference51 articles.
1. Normative Values for the Voice Handicap Index-10
2. PredictingDiagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-IV personality disorders with the five-factor model of personality and the personality psychopathology five
3. Bar-On, R. (2001). Emotional intelligence and self-actualization. In J. Ciarrochi , J. P. Forgas , & J. D. Mayer (Eds.), Emotional intelligence in everyday life: A scientific inquiry (pp. 82–97). Psychology Press.
4. Bar-On, R. , & Parker, J. D. A. (2000). The handbook of emotional intelligence: Theory, development, assessment, and application at home, school, and in the workplace. Jossey-Bass.
5. Stealing Cookies in the Twenty-First Century: Measures of Spoken Narrative in Healthy Versus Speakers With Aphasia
Cited by
3 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