The Relationship Between Single-Word Speech Severity and Intelligibility in Childhood Apraxia of Speech

Author:

Chenausky Karen V.123ORCID,Gagné Danielle1,Stipancic Kaila L.14ORCID,Shield Aaron5,Green Jordan R.16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. MGH Institute of Health Professions, Boston, MA

2. Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA

3. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Boston University, MA

4. Department of Communicative Disorders and Sciences, University at Buffalo, NY

5. Department of Speech Pathology & Audiology, Miami University, Oxford, OH

6. Speech and Hearing and Biosciences and Technology Program, Harvard University, Boston, MA

Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to investigate the association between perceived single-word speech severity and intelligibility in children with childhood apraxia of speech (CAS), with and without comorbid language impairment (LI), and to investigate the contribution of different CAS signs to perceived single-word speech severity and single-word intelligibility. Method: Thirty children with CAS, 18 with comorbid LI, completed the Goldman-Fristoe Test of Articulation–Second Edition (GFTA-2). Trained judges coded children's responses for signs of CAS and percent phonemes correct. Nine listeners, blind to diagnoses, rated speech severity using a visual analog scale. Intelligibility was assessed by comparing listeners' orthographic transcriptions of children's responses to target responses. Results: Measures of speech severity (GFTA-2 standard score, number of unique CAS signs, total CAS signs, and mean severity rating) were significantly correlated with measures of intelligibility (GFTA-2 raw score, percent phonemes correct, and mean intelligibility score). Speech severity and intelligibility did not differ significantly between children with and without LI. Only consonant errors contributed significant variability to speech severity. Consonant errors and stress errors contributed significant variability to intelligibility. Conclusions: Findings suggest that visual analog scale ratings are a valid and convenient measure of single-word speech severity and that GFTA-2 raw score is an equally convenient measure of single-word intelligibility. The result that consonant errors were by far the major contributor to single-word speech severity and intelligibility in children with CAS, with stress errors also making a small contribution to intelligibility, suggests that consonant accuracy and appropriate lexical stress should be prime therapeutic targets for these children in the context of treatment addressing motor planning/programming, self-monitoring, and self-correcting. Supplemental Material: https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.19119350

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

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1. A Case Study of Suspected Childhood Apraxia of Sign;Perspectives of the ASHA Special Interest Groups;2024-08-07

2. Treatment for Childhood Apraxia of Speech: Past, Present, and Future;Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research;2024-05-20

3. Vowel Development and Disorders;The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics, Second Edition;2024-01-08

4. Speech and Music Therapy in the Treatment of Childhood Apraxia of Speech: An Introduction and a Case Study;Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research;2023-08-25

5. Self-Reported Communication Attitudes of Children With Childhood Apraxia of Speech: An Exploratory Study;American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology;2023-08-17

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