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Original Articles

Assessing speech correction abilities with acoustic analyses: Evidence of preserved online correction in persons with aphasia

ORCID Icon &
Pages 659-668 | Received 10 Jun 2017, Accepted 28 Jun 2018, Published online: 22 Oct 2018
 

Abstract

Purpose: Disorders of speech production may be accompanied by abnormal processing of speech sensory feedback. Here, we introduce a semi-automated analysis designed to assess the degree to which speakers use natural online feedback to decrease acoustic variability in spoken words. Because production deficits in aphasia have been hypothesised to stem from problems with sensorimotor integration, we investigated whether persons with aphasia (PWA) can correct their speech acoustics online.

Method: Eight PWA in the chronic stage produced 200 repetitions each of three monosyllabic words. Formant variability was measured for each vowel in multiple time windows within the syllable, and the reduction in formant variability from vowel onset to midpoint was quantified.

Result: PWA significantly decreased acoustic variability over the course of the syllable, providing evidence of online feedback correction mechanisms. The magnitude of this corrective formant movement exceeded past measurements in control participants.

Conclusion: Vowel centreing behaviour suggests that error correction abilities are at least partially spared in speakers with aphasia, and may be relied upon to compensate for feedforward deficits by bringing utterances back on track. These proof of concept data show the potential of this analysis technique to elucidate the mechanisms underlying disorders of speech production.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Sara Beach for assisting in data collection and analysis and Erin Meier, Jeffrey Johnson, and Natalie Gilmore for helpful comments on the manuscript.

Declaration of interest

The authors report no conflicts of interest.

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