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法语口吃儿童言语提示的影响。

Effects of speech cues in French-speaking children with dysarthria.

机构信息

Program in Communication Sciences and Disorders, Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA.

Department of Communication Sciences & Disorders, Long Island University, Brooklyn, NY, USA.

出版信息

Int J Lang Commun Disord. 2020 May;55(3):401-416. doi: 10.1111/1460-6984.12526. Epub 2020 Feb 20.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Articulatory excursion and vocal intensity are reduced in many children with dysarthria due to cerebral palsy (CP), contributing to the children's intelligibility deficits and negatively affecting their social participation. However, the effects of speech-treatment strategies for improving intelligibility in this population are understudied, especially for children who speak languages other than English. In a cueing study on English-speaking children with dysarthria, acoustic variables and intelligibility improved when the children were provided with cues aimed to increase articulatory excursion and vocal intensity. While French is among the top 20 most spoken languages in the world, dysarthria and its management in French-speaking children are virtually unexplored areas of research. Information gleaned from such research is critical for providing an evidence base on which to provide treatment.

AIMS

To examine acoustic and perceptual changes in the speech of French-speaking children with dysarthria, who are provided with speech cues targeting greater articulatory excursion (French translation of 'speak with your big mouth') and vocal intensity (French translation of 'speak with your strong voice'). This study investigated whether, in response to the cues, the children would make acoustic changes and listeners would perceive the children's speech as more intelligible.

METHODS & PROCEDURES: Eleven children with dysarthria due to CP (six girls, five boys; ages 4;11-17;0 years; eight with spastic CP, three with dyskinetic CP) repeated pre-recorded speech stimuli across three speaking conditions (habitual, 'big mouth' and 'strong voice'). Stimuli were sentences and contrastive words in phrases. Acoustic analyses were conducted. A total of 66 Belgian-French listeners transcribed the children's utterances orthographically and rated their ease of understanding on a visual analogue scale at sentence and word levels.

OUTCOMES & RESULTS: Acoustic analyses revealed significantly longer duration in response to the big mouth cue at sentence level and in response to both the big mouth and strong voice cues at word level. Significantly higher vocal sound-pressure levels were found following both cues at sentence and word levels. Both cues elicited significantly higher first-formant vowel frequencies and listeners' greater ease-of-understanding ratings at word level. Increases in the percentage of words transcribed correctly and in sentence ease-of-understanding ratings, however, did not reach statistical significance. Considerable variability between children was observed.

CONCLUSIONS & IMPLICATIONS: Speech cues targeting greater articulatory excursion and vocal intensity yield significant acoustic changes in French-speaking children with dysarthria. However, the changes may only aid listeners' ease of understanding at word level. The significant findings and great inter-speaker variability are generally consistent with studies on English-speaking children with dysarthria, although changes appear more constrained in these French-speaking children. What this paper adds What is already known on the subject According to the only study comparing effects of speech-cueing strategies on English-speaking children with dysarthria, intelligibility increases when the children are provided with cues aimed to increase articulatory excursion and vocal intensity. Little is known about speech characteristics in French-speaking children with dysarthria and no published research has explored effects of cueing strategies in this population. What this paper adds to existing knowledge This paper is the first study to examine the effects of speech cues on the acoustics and intelligibility of French-speaking children with CP. It provides evidence that the children can make use of cues to modify their speech, although the changes may only aid listeners' ease of understanding at word level. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work? For clinicians, the findings suggest that speech cues emphasizing increasing articulatory excursion and vocal intensity show promise for improving the ease of understanding of words produced by francophone children with dysarthria, although improvements may be modest. The variability in the responses also suggests that this population may benefit from a combination of such cues to produce words that are easier to understand.

摘要

背景

脑瘫导致许多口吃儿童的发音运动幅度和发声强度降低,这导致了他们的可理解度缺陷,并对他们的社会参与产生负面影响。然而,针对这一人群提高可理解度的言语治疗策略的效果研究甚少,尤其是针对讲英语以外语言的儿童。在一项针对口吃英语儿童的提示研究中,当儿童被提供旨在增加发音运动幅度和发声强度的提示时,语音变量和可理解度得到了改善。虽然法语是世界上使用人数最多的语言之一,但在说法语的儿童中,口吃及其管理几乎是一个未被探索的研究领域。从这类研究中获得的信息对于提供基于证据的治疗方法至关重要。

目的

研究接受旨在增加发音运动幅度(法语翻译为“用大嘴巴说话”)和发声强度(法语翻译为“用强有力的声音说话”)的言语提示的法语口吃儿童的语音变化和感知变化。本研究调查了儿童是否会对此类提示做出声学变化,以及听众是否会认为儿童的言语更易于理解。

方法与程序

11 名患有脑瘫导致的口吃的儿童(6 名女孩,5 名男孩;年龄 4 岁 11 个月-17 岁 0 个月;8 名痉挛型脑瘫,3 名运动障碍型脑瘫)在三种说话条件(习惯性、“大嘴巴”和“强声音”)下重复预录的语音刺激。刺激物为句子和短语中的对比词。进行了声学分析。共有 66 名比利时法语听众对儿童的发音进行了拼写字迹转录,并在句子和单词水平上通过视觉模拟量表对其理解的难易程度进行了评分。

结果

在句子水平上,“大嘴巴”提示后的发音持续时间明显延长,在单词水平上,“大嘴巴”和“强声音”提示后的发音持续时间均明显延长。在句子和单词水平上,两种提示后的声压级均显著升高。两种提示都引起了第一共振峰元音频率的显著升高,以及听众对单词水平理解度的更高评分。然而,正确转录单词的百分比和句子理解度评分的增加并没有达到统计学意义。在儿童之间观察到相当大的差异。

结论与意义

针对更大发音运动幅度和发声强度的言语提示可使法语口吃儿童的语音产生显著的声学变化。然而,这些变化可能仅有助于提高听众对单词的理解度。与针对英语口吃儿童的研究相比,这一研究发现基本一致,尽管这些说法语的儿童的变化似乎更受限制。这篇论文增加了什么内容?

  1. 已知的内容:根据唯一一项比较针对口吃儿童的言语提示策略效果的研究,当儿童被提供旨在增加发音运动幅度和发声强度的提示时,可理解度会提高。关于说法语的口吃儿童的语音特征知之甚少,也没有发表研究探讨这一人群的提示策略效果。

  2. 增加的知识:本文是第一项研究法语口吃儿童的语音提示对其声学和可理解度的影响的论文。它提供了证据表明,儿童可以利用提示来改变他们的语音,尽管这些变化可能仅有助于提高听众对单词的理解度。

  3. 潜在或实际的临床意义:对于临床医生来说,这些发现表明,强调增加发音运动幅度和发声强度的言语提示有望改善说法语的口吃儿童的单词理解度,尽管改善可能是适度的。儿童反应的变化也表明,这种人群可能受益于多种提示来产生更易于理解的单词。

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