Affiliation:
1. Intensive Care Unit, Kanazawa University Hospital, Japan
2. Department of Rehabilitation, Kanazawa University Hospital, Japan
3. Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Kanazawa University, Japan
Abstract
Purpose
The aim of this study was to investigate the characteristics of electrolaryngeal (EL) speech among untrained speakers to aid in its effective introduction and to identify syllables and words that are easy or difficult to pronounce.
Method
A total of 21 healthy individuals who had never used an EL were included. The participants were briefed, and tests comprising 100 Japanese syllables and 50 single words were conducted to evaluate EL speech intelligibility. A trained speaker was defined as a certified speech-language pathologist who underwent EL training for 3 months. A 5-point electrolarynx effectivity score (EES) was used for the subjective assessment of EL.
Results
The median (interquartile range) intelligibility scores of the untrained and trained groups were 24.0% (20.0%–34.0%) and 40.0% (36.0%–45.0%) for syllables and 48.0% (38.0%–60.0%) and 88.0% (82.0%–90.0%) for words, respectively. The intelligibility scores for syllables and words were higher in the trained group than those in the untrained group. Only two syllable subgroups (/m/ and /w/) had > 80% correct answers among untrained speakers. A total of 14 syllable subgroups (/k, kʲ, s, ɕ, t, t͡ɕ, ts, ɲ, h, ç, ɸ, p, pʲ, and a/), a number of which contained voiceless consonants, had < 40% correct answers among both speaker groups. A greater number of morae were associated with higher intelligibility scores. An EES of 4, indicating that the EL was effective, was the most frequent score.
Conclusions
It was difficult for untrained speakers to produce intelligible speech using an EL. Syllables, including voiceless consonants, were difficult to pronounce using an EL. Longer words with a greater number of morae were more intelligible, even for untrained EL speakers.
Supplemental Material
https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.16632622
Publisher
American Speech Language Hearing Association
Subject
Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
2 articles.
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