Communication Sciences and Disorders, Ohio University, Athens, OH 45701-2979, USA.
Percept Mot Skills. 2013 Apr;116(2):456-65. doi: 10.2466/24.10.PMS.116.2.456-465.
To date, observations of the scalp-recorded frequency-following response (FFR) to voice pitch have depended on subjective interpretation of the experimenter. The purpose of this study was to develop and evaluate an automated procedure for detecting the presence of a response. Twenty American (9 boys, 1-3 days) and 20 Chinese (10 boys, 1-3 days) neonates were recruited. A Chinese monosyllable that mimicked the English vowel /i/ with a rising pitch (117-166 Hz) was used as the stimulus. Three objective indices (Frequency Error, Tracking Accuracy, and Pitch Strength) were computed from the recorded brain waves and the test results were compared with human judgments to calculate the sensitivity and specificity values. Results demonstrated that the automated procedure produced sensitivity values between 53-90% and specificity values between 80-100%, and could be used to assess the presence of an FFR for neonates who were born in a tonal or non-tonal language environment.
迄今为止,对头皮记录的频率跟随反应(FFR)对语音音高的观察依赖于实验者的主观解释。本研究旨在开发和评估一种用于检测反应存在的自动程序。招募了 20 名美国婴儿(9 名男孩,1-3 天)和 20 名中国婴儿(10 名男孩,1-3 天)。使用一个模仿英语元音 /i/ 的带有上升音高(117-166Hz)的中文单音节作为刺激。从记录的脑电波中计算出三个客观指标(频率误差、跟踪精度和音强),并将测试结果与人类判断进行比较,以计算灵敏度和特异性值。结果表明,自动程序产生的灵敏度值在 53-90%之间,特异性值在 80-100%之间,可用于评估在声调或非声调语言环境中出生的新生儿 FFR 的存在。