OBJECTIVE: The relations between acoustic measures and their articulatory bases have rarely been tested in dysarthria but are important for diagnostic and treatment purposes. We tested the association between acoustic measures of F2 range and F2 slope with kinematic measures of tongue movement displacement and speed in individuals with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and healthy controls speaking at normal and slow rates. Relations between acoustic and kinematic measures and speech intelligibility were examined. RESULTS: As healthy controls reduced their speaking rate, their F2 slopes and movement speeds decreased. In talkers with ALS, acoustic and kinematic variables were associated with changes in speaking rate, characteristic of disease progression. Participants with slow rate had shallower F2 slopes and slower movement speeds than those with normal rate. Relations between F2 range and tongue displacement were weaker. F2 slope, displacement, and duration were correlated with speech intelligibility most consistently. CONCLUSION: Findings suggested that F2 slope is a useful marker for tracking disease progression in ALS. F2 slope reflects changes in tongue function with disease progression and is linked to speech intelligibility. Changes in movement speed, however, might be the earliest sign of disease in the tongue.
OBJECTIVE: The relations between acoustic measures and their articulatory bases have rarely been tested in dysarthria but are important for diagnostic and treatment purposes. We tested the association between acoustic measures of F2 range and F2 slope with kinematic measures of tongue movement displacement and speed in individuals with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and healthy controls speaking at normal and slow rates. Relations between acoustic and kinematic measures and speech intelligibility were examined. RESULTS: As healthy controls reduced their speaking rate, their F2 slopes and movement speeds decreased. In talkers with ALS, acoustic and kinematic variables were associated with changes in speaking rate, characteristic of disease progression. Participants with slow rate had shallower F2 slopes and slower movement speeds than those with normal rate. Relations between F2 range and tongue displacement were weaker. F2 slope, displacement, and duration were correlated with speech intelligibility most consistently. CONCLUSION: Findings suggested that F2 slope is a useful marker for tracking disease progression in ALS. F2 slope reflects changes in tongue function with disease progression and is linked to speech intelligibility. Changes in movement speed, however, might be the earliest sign of disease in the tongue.
Authors: Jun Wang; Prasanna V Kothalkar; Myungjong Kim; Andrea Bandini; Beiming Cao; Yana Yunusova; Thomas F Campbell; Daragh Heitzman; Jordan R Green Journal: Int J Speech Lang Pathol Date: 2018-11-08 Impact factor: 2.484
Authors: Adam Pacheck; Alex Mijailovic; Sung Yim; Jia Li; Jordan R Green; Courtney E McIlduff; Seward B Rutkove Journal: Clin Neurophysiol Date: 2015-12-11 Impact factor: 3.708
Authors: Jun Wang; Prasanna V Kothalkar; Myungjong Kim; Yana Yunusova; Thomas F Campbell; Daragh Heitzman; Jordan R Green Journal: Workshop Speech Lang Process Assist Technol Date: 2016-09