Literature DB >> 25388073

Nasalance during use of pharyngeal and glottal place of production.

Ariany Fernanda Garcia1, Viviane Cristina de Castro Marino2, Maria Inês Pegoraro-Krook3, Thais Alves Guerra1, José Roberto Pereira Lauris3, Jeniffer de Cassia Rillo Dutka3.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: This study obtained nasalance scores during use of compensatory articulation (CA) and compared nasalance between groups with and without hypernasality and with and without CA.
METHODS: Speech samples were obtained from 43 individuals with and without velopharyngeal dysfunction during repetition of 20 phrases originating 860 audio recordings and their respective nasometric values. After excluding 143 recordings due to low quality, the remaining 717 samples were rated by three speech language pathologists (SLPs), independently, for presence or absence of hypernasality and CA. Nasalance scores for the 553 samples rated with 100% agreement among the SLPs were grouped according to the auditory-perceptual ratings: Group 1 (G1) - included samples without hypernasality and without CA (n=191); Group2 (G2) - included samples with hypernasality and without CA (n=288); Group 3 (G3) - included samples with hypernasality and with pharyngeal fricative (n=33); Group 4 (G4) - included samples with hypernasality and with glottal stop (n=41).
RESULTS: Analysis of variance (ANOVA) revealed significant difference nasalance scores which were significantly higher for G2, G3, and G4 (p<0.0001) when compared to G1. The use of pharyngeal fricative (G3), particularly during /f/ (p=0.0018) and /s/ (p=0.0017) productions resulted in nasalance scores significantly higher than scores found for G2.
CONCLUSION: Significantly higher nasalance values where identified during use of pharyngeal fricative.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25388073     DOI: 10.1590/2317-1782/20142014071

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Codas        ISSN: 2317-1782


  1 in total

1.  Acoustic analysis and detection of pharyngeal fricative in cleft palate speech using correlation of signals in independent frequency bands and octave spectrum prominent peak.

Authors:  Fei He; Xiyue Wang; Heng Yin; Han Zhang; Gang Yang; Ling He
Journal:  Biomed Eng Online       Date:  2020-05-27       Impact factor: 2.819

  1 in total

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