Bunton Kate, Leddy Mark
Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721-0071, USA.
Clin Linguist Phon. 2011 Apr;25(4):321-34. doi: 10.3109/02699206.2010.535647. Epub 2010 Nov 22.
Many adolescents and adults with Down syndrome have reduced speech intelligibility. Reasons for this reduction may relate to differences in anatomy and physiology, both of which are important for creating an intelligible speech signal. The purpose of this study was to document acoustic vowel space and articulatory working space for two adult speakers with Down syndrome who had reduced speech intelligibility (mean = 56% based on single words). Articulatory data for the tongue were collected using a real-time flesh-point tracking method (i.e. X-ray microbeam). Results show smaller F1?F2 acoustic vowel space area for both speakers with Down syndrome compared with the control speakers. Reduced articulatory working space area and slower movement speed were also found for three of the four tongue points analysed. Although generalizations are limited by the small number of participants, findings warrant further investigation of the underlying articulatory characteristics of speech production for individuals with Down syndrome.
许多患有唐氏综合征的青少年和成年人语音清晰度较低。这种降低的原因可能与解剖学和生理学差异有关,这两者对于产生可理解的语音信号都很重要。本研究的目的是记录两名患有唐氏综合征且语音清晰度较低(基于单字的平均清晰度为56%)的成年说话者的声学元音空间和发音工作空间。使用实时肉点跟踪方法(即X射线微束)收集舌头的发音数据。结果显示,与对照说话者相比,两名患有唐氏综合征的说话者的F1-F2声学元音空间面积较小。在所分析的四个舌点中的三个点上,还发现发音工作空间面积减小和运动速度减慢。尽管由于参与者数量较少,概括受到限制,但研究结果值得进一步研究唐氏综合征患者语音产生的潜在发音特征。