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Original

The role of prosody in a case of foreign accent syndrome (FAS)

, PhD, &
Pages 537-566 | Received 03 Oct 2006, Accepted 05 Apr 2008, Published online: 09 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Foreign accent syndrome (FAS) is a rare disorder characterized by the emergence of a perceived foreign accent following brain damage. The symptomotology, functional bases, and neural substrates of this disorder are still being elucidated. In this case study, acoustic analyses were performed on the speech of a 46‐year old monolingual female who presented with FAS of unknown aetiology. The patient had a pseudo‐accent frequently described as ‘Swedish’ or ‘Eastern European’. Stop consonant VOT, consonant burst spectra and duration, vowel durations, formant frequencies, and trajectories were analysed, along with prosodic cues for lexical stress assignment and sentence‐level intonation. Results indicated VOT values were generally preserved, while there was a strong tendency to realize the English alveolar flap as a full stop, and to produce flaps that had greater‐than‐normal closure durations. The spectral properties of the patient's vowels resembled those of normal talkers (with the possible exceptions of decreased F1 values for /i/ and slight differences in formant dynamics for /u/, /o/, /i/, and /ϵ/). However, vowel durations were relatively long, contributing to exaggerated tense/lax contrasts. Token‐to‐token variability in vowel production was slightly higher than normal for duration, but not for formant frequency values. Lexical stress assignment was inaccurate and highly variable (with similar problems noted for non‐speech materials), and sentence level intonation showed occasional deviations from typical American English patterns. For this patient, an underlying timing/rhythm difficulty appeared responsible for the range of segmental and suprasegmental changes leading to the impression of a foreign accent.

Notes

1. The phonemes /e/ and /o/ are realized as /ei/ and /o/ by most speakers of American English, especially in open syllables.

2. The female talkers of the Assmann and Katz (Citation2000) database reported middle‐class socioeconomic status and a high‐school or college level of education. They ranged from 21–44 years old (M = 30 years). Talker age and socioeconomic data were not available for the Hillenbrand et al. (Citation1995) corpus.

3. Vowel qualities may change diachronically. Thus, the formant frequencies listed by Peterson and Barney (1952) are not necessarily representative of American talkers today (see Clopper, Pisoni, & de Jong, Citation2005, for discussion).

4. Assmann and Katz (Citation2000) reported formant frequency values for windows centred at 33% and 66% of the duration of the vowel. Formant estimates at 20% and 80% of these same vowels were included in a brief report by Assmann and Katz (Citation2001).

Declaration of interest: The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

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