Affiliation:
1. Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN
2. Department of Biostatistics and School of Nursing, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN
Abstract
Purpose
This study sought to identify the articulator-specific mechanisms that underlie reduced and enhanced acoustic vowel contrast in talkers with dysarthria due to Parkinson's disease (PD).
Method
Seventeen talkers with mild–moderate dysarthria due to PD and 17 controls completed a sentence repetition task using typical, slow, loud, and clear speech. Tongue and jaw articulatory movements were recorded using 3D electromagnetic articulography. Independent tongue displacements, jaw displacements, and acoustic vowel contrast were calculated for the diphthong /aɪ/ embedded in the word
kite.
Results
During typical speech, independent tongue displacement, but not jaw displacement, contributed significantly to the intertalker variance in acoustic vowel contrast. Loudness-related acoustic vowel contrast gains were predominantly jaw driven in controls but driven by the tongue and jaw in talkers with PD. Further, in both groups, clarity-related acoustic vowel contrast gains were predominantly jaw driven. Finally, in both groups, rate-related acoustic vowel contrast gains were predominantly tongue driven; however, the jaw also contributed. These jaw contributions were greater in the PD group than in the control group.
Conclusions
Findings suggest that a tongue-specific articulatory impairment underlies acoustic vowel contrast deterioration in talkers with PD, at least during the early stages of speech decline. Findings further suggest that slow speech engages the impaired tongue more than loud and clear speech in talkers with PD. However, slow speech was also associated with an abnormally strong jaw response in these talkers, which suggests that a compensatory articulatory behavior may also be elicited.
Publisher
American Speech Language Hearing Association
Subject
Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
14 articles.
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1. Acoustic and Kinematic Predictors of Intelligibility and Articulatory Precision in Parkinson's Disease;Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research;2024-09-11
2. Using sustained vowels to identify patients with mild Parkinson’s disease in a Chinese dataset;Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience;2024-05-03
3. Articulatory Phonology and Speech Impairment;The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics, Second Edition;2024-01-08
4. Instrumental Analysis of Speech Production;The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics, Second Edition;2024-01-08
5. Dysarthria;Reference Module in Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Psychology;2024