Speech patterns during memory recall relates to early tau burden across adulthood

Author:

Young Christina B.1ORCID,Smith Viktorija1,Karjadi Cody2,Grogan Selah‐Marie1,Ang Ting Fang Alvin2,Insel Philip S.3,Henderson Victor W.14,Sumner Meghan5,Poston Kathleen L.16,Au Rhoda2,Mormino Elizabeth C.16

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology and Neurological Sciences Stanford University School of Medicine Stanford California USA

2. Department of Anatomy & Neurobiology and Framingham Heart Study Boston University Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine Boston Massachusetts USA

3. Department of Psychiatry University of California San Francisco San Francisco California USA

4. Department of Epidemiology and Population Health Stanford University Stanford California USA

5. Department of Linguistics Stanford University Stanford California USA

6. Wu Tsai Neuroscience Institute Stanford University Stanford California USA

Abstract

AbstractINTRODUCTIONEarly cognitive decline may manifest in subtle differences in speech.METHODSWe examined 238 cognitively unimpaired adults from the Framingham Heart Study (32–75 years) who completed amyloid and tau PET imaging. Speech patterns during delayed recall of a story memory task were quantified via five speech markers, and their associations with global amyloid status and regional tau signal were examined.RESULTSTotal utterance time, number of between‐utterance pauses, speech rate, and percentage of unique words significantly correlated with delayed recall score although the shared variance was low (2%–15%). Delayed recall score was not significantly different between β‐amyoid‐positive (Aβ+) and ‐negative (Aβ−) groups and was not associated with regional tau signal. However, longer and more between‐utterance pauses, and slower speech rate were associated with increased tau signal across medial temporal and early neocortical regions.DISCUSSIONSubtle speech changes during memory recall may reflect cognitive impairment associated with early Alzheimer's disease pathology.Highlights Speech during delayed memory recall relates to tau PET signal across adulthood. Delayed memory recall score was not associated with tau PET signal. Speech shows greater sensitivity to detecting subtle cognitive changes associated with early tau accumulation. Our cohort spans adulthood, while most PET imaging studies focus on older adults.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Alzheimer's Association

Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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