帕金森病患者言语健康分类的跨语言视角

IF 1.2 3区 心理学 Q2 LINGUISTICS
Vass Verkhodanova , Matt Coler , Roel Jonkers , Sanne Timmermans , Natasha Maurits , Bauke de Jong , Wander Lowie
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引用次数: 0

摘要

帕金森氏症患者经常会遇到沟通问题。当前的跨语言研究调查了听者对言语健康的感知判断与帕金森病患者言语中出现的声学变化之间的关系。因此,我们报告了一个在线实验目标感知健康的语言。我们在横断面设计中研究了健康感知判断与语音声学特征之间的关系。我们招募了169名参与者,他们完成了一项分类任务,将患有帕金森病的荷兰语使用者和对照组的荷兰语使用者的语音录音判断为“健康”或“不健康”。这两组听众在语言治疗方面的训练和专业知识以及母语方面都有所不同。这样的分组分离使我们能够在不受录音内容影响的情况下研究语音健康的声学相关性。我们使用随机森林方法来预测听众的反应。我们的研究结果表明,在独立于专业知识和语言背景的情况下,在将语音分类为健康或不健康时,听者对语速、最大发声时间测量所反映的发声缺陷的存在以及元音的集中更为敏感。结果表明,专业知识的特殊性和语言背景都可能导致听者更多地依赖于韵律或发音领域的特征。我们的研究结果表明,不同听者对帕金森病患者言语分类的更全面的感知判断可以从传统的声学特征中得到足够可靠的预测。这表明帕金森氏症患者说话时声音变化的普遍性。因此,我们得出结论,发音和韵律的某些方面是独立于母语或专业知识的听者的语言健康的显著标志。我们的研究结果对帕金森病患者的主观言语感知具有临床实践和现实意义,而关于触发听者将言语分类为“不健康”的特定声学变化的信息可以提供特定的治疗靶点,除了现有的帕金森病患者构音障碍治疗之外。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A cross-linguistic perspective to classification of healthiness of speech in Parkinson's disease

People with Parkinson's disease often experience communication problems. The current cross-linguistic study investigates how listeners' perceptual judgements of speech healthiness are related to the acoustic changes appearing in the speech of people with Parkinson's disease. Accordingly, we report on an online experiment targeting perceived healthiness of speech. We studied the relations between healthiness perceptual judgements and a set of acoustic characteristics of speech in a cross-sectional design. We recruited 169 participants, who performed a classification task judging speech recordings of Dutch speakers with Parkinson's disease and of Dutch control speakers as ‘healthy’ or ‘unhealthy’. The groups of listeners differed in their training and expertise in speech language therapy as well as in their native languages. Such group separation allowed us to investigate the acoustic correlates of speech healthiness without influence of the content of the recordings.

We used a Random Forest method to predict listeners' responses. Our findings demonstrate that, independently of expertise and language background, when classifying speech as healthy or unhealthy listeners are more sensitive to speech rate, presence of phonation deficiency reflected by maximum phonation time measurement, and centralization of the vowels. The results indicate that both specifics of the expertise and language background may lead to listeners relying more on the features from either prosody or phonation domains. Our findings demonstrate that more global perceptual judgements of different listeners classifying speech of people with Parkinson's disease may be predicted with sufficient reliability from conventional acoustic features. This suggests universality of acoustic change in speech of people with Parkinson's disease. Therefore, we concluded that certain aspects of phonation and prosody serve as prominent markers of speech healthiness for listeners independent of their first language or expertise. Our findings have outcomes for the clinical practice and real-life implications for subjective perception of speech of people with Parkinson's disease, while information about particular acoustic changes that trigger listeners to classify speech as ‘unhealthy’ can provide specific therapeutic targets in addition to the existing dysarthria treatment in people with Parkinson's disease.

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来源期刊
Journal of Neurolinguistics
Journal of Neurolinguistics 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
5.00%
发文量
49
审稿时长
17.2 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Neurolinguistics is an international forum for the integration of the neurosciences and language sciences. JNL provides for rapid publication of novel, peer-reviewed research into the interaction between language, communication and brain processes. The focus is on rigorous studies of an empirical or theoretical nature and which make an original contribution to our knowledge about the involvement of the nervous system in communication and its breakdowns. Contributions from neurology, communication disorders, linguistics, neuropsychology and cognitive science in general are welcome. Published articles will typically address issues relating some aspect of language or speech function to its neurological substrates with clear theoretical import. Interdisciplinary work on any aspect of the biological foundations of language and its disorders resulting from brain damage is encouraged. Studies of normal subjects, with clear reference to brain functions, are appropriate. Group-studies on well defined samples and case studies with well documented lesion or nervous system dysfunction are acceptable. The journal is open to empirical reports and review articles. Special issues on aspects of the relation between language and the structure and function of the nervous system are also welcome.
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