Objective Measure of Nasal Air Emission Using Nasal Accelerometry

Author:

Cler Gabriel J.12,Lien Yu-An S.3,Braden Maia N.4,Mittelman Talia23,Downing Kerri2,Stepp Cara E.1235

Affiliation:

1. Graduate Program for Neuroscience–Computational Neuroscience, Boston University, MA

2. Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, Boston University, MA

3. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Boston University, MA

4. Department of Surgery, Division of Otolaryngology, Voice and Swallow Clinics, University of Wisconsin–Madison

5. Department of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery, Boston University School of Medicine, MA

Abstract

Purpose This article describes the development and initial validation of an objective measure of nasal air emission (NAE) using nasal accelerometry. Method Nasal acceleration and nasal airflow signals were simultaneously recorded while an expert speech language pathologist modeled NAEs at a variety of severity levels. In addition, microphone and nasal accelerometer signals were collected during the production of /pɑpɑpɑpɑ/ speech utterances by 25 children with and without cleft palate. Fourteen inexperienced raters listened to the microphone signals from the pediatric speakers and rated the samples for the severity of NAE using direct magnitude estimation. Mean listener ratings were compared to a novel quantitative measurement of NAE derived from the nasal acceleration signals. Results Correlation between the nasal acceleration energy measure and the measured nasal airflow was high ( r = .87). Correlation between the measure and auditory-perceptual ratings was moderate ( r = .49). Conclusion The measure presented here is quantitative and noninvasive, and the required hardware is inexpensive ($150). Future studies will include speakers with a wider range of NAE severity and etiology, including cleft palate, hearing impairment, or dysarthria. Further development will also involve validation of the measure against airflow measures across subjects.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference35 articles.

1. Validity and Reliability of Visual Analog Scaling for Assessment of Hypernasality and Audible Nasal Emission in Children with Repaired Cleft Palate

2. Perceptions of Audible Nasal Emission in Speakers with Cleft Palate: A Comparative Study of Listener Judgments

3. Boersma P. & Weenink D. (2015). Praat: Doing phonetics by computer (Version 5.4) . Retrieved from http://www.praat.org/

4. Braden, M. N. , Varghese, L. A. , & Stepp, C. E. (2013). Application of normalized nasal acceleration to children with and without cleft palate. Paper presented at the Annual Convention of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, Chicago, IL.

5. The Relationship between Nasalance Scores and Nasality Ratings Obtained with Equal Appearing Interval and Direct Magnitude Estimation Scaling Methods

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