Goozée J V, Murdoch B E, Theodoros D G, Stokes P D
Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
Brain Inj. 2000 Feb;14(2):153-74. doi: 10.1080/026990500120817.
Electromagnetic articulography (EMA), a technique that uses alternating magnetic fields to track the movement of miniature receiver coils affixed to the articulators, was used to assess the speed and accuracy of tongue movements exhibited by an individual with dysarthria following severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). Three receiver coils were attached to the TBI subject's tongue and the movements of these coils were recorded during five productions of three single syllable real words consisting of the lingual consonants /t, s, k/ in the word-initial position. A non-neurologically impaired adult male served as a control subject. A range of kinematic parameters was analysed from the consonant productions including the movement trajectories, velocity, acceleration, distance, and duration of tongue movements. Examination of the complex interactions between the kinematic parameters recorded for the TBI subject revealed a disturbance in the 'control' of tongue speed rather than a disturbance in speed per se, as it was found that the TBI subject exhibited difficulty in decelerating his tongue movements appropriately on the approach up to the palate during consonant production. The difficulty noted in deceleration resulted in inaccurate tongue movements that overshot the point of intent (in the case of /t/) and may have been instrumental in reducing the length of time that the tongue remained at the palate (in the case of /s/ and /k/) in comparison to the control subject. The disturbances identified in the kinematic parameters recorded provided objective insights into the nature of the articulatory disturbances responsible for the deviant speech feature, consonant imprecision, perceived in the TBI subject's speech. The study stresses the importance of examining a range of kinematic parameters and the interactions between these parameters in attempting to determine the nature of articulatory disturbances exhibited by individuals with dysarthria following TBI.
电磁关节造影术(EMA)是一种利用交变磁场跟踪附着在关节上的微型接收线圈运动的技术,用于评估一名重度创伤性脑损伤(TBI)后构音障碍患者舌部运动的速度和准确性。三个接收线圈附着在该TBI患者的舌头上,并在由词首位置的舌辅音/t、s、k/组成的三个单音节实词的五次发音过程中记录这些线圈的运动。一名无神经功能障碍的成年男性作为对照受试者。分析了辅音发音过程中的一系列运动学参数,包括运动轨迹、速度、加速度、距离和舌部运动持续时间。对TBI患者记录的运动学参数之间复杂相互作用的检查显示,舌部速度“控制”存在干扰,而非速度本身存在干扰,因为发现TBI患者在辅音发音过程中接近上腭时难以适当减速舌部运动。减速时出现的困难导致舌部运动不准确,超过了预期点(如/t/的情况),并且与对照受试者相比,可能导致舌部停留在上腭的时间缩短(如/s/和/k/的情况)。记录的运动学参数中发现的干扰为导致TBI患者语音中出现异常语音特征——辅音不精确的构音干扰性质提供了客观见解。该研究强调了在试图确定TBI后构音障碍患者所表现出的构音干扰性质时,检查一系列运动学参数及其之间相互作用的重要性。