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Original

Speech rate effects upon intelligibility and acceptability of dysarthric speech

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Pages 141-148 | Received 27 Jun 2004, Accepted 03 Nov 2004, Published online: 09 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Sentences recorded by four speakers with dysarthria and two control speakers were presented to listeners at three different rates: habitual, a 30% slower rate and a 30% higher rate. Rate changes were made by digitally manipulating the habitual sentences. Thirty young normal adult listeners rated the sentences for intelligibility (per cent correct words) and acceptability (via 9‐point equal interval scale ranging from “terrible” through “excellent”). Intelligibility for each speaker remained unchanged across rate changes. Acceptability improved as rates increased for the two more intelligible impaired speakers. For the less intelligible impaired speakers, ratings were better and similar for the habitual and fast speaking rate conditions. Results are discussed in terms of the objective nature of intelligibility ratings vs. the subjective ratings of acceptability.

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