Laboratoire Parole & Langage, Aix-Marseille Univ, CNRS, LPL, Aix-en-Provence, France.
Centre Hospitalier du Pays d'Aix, Service de Neurologie, Aix-en-Provence, France.
Clin Linguist Phon. 2021 Oct 3;35(10):926-944. doi: 10.1080/02699206.2020.1839969. Epub 2020 Oct 28.
We examined the effect of linguistic factors on the perceptual identification of intervocalic consonants produced by speakers with Parkinson's Diseases (PD). To neutralize the effect of preceding and following contexts, all the intervocalic consonants were excised with half the preceding and following vowels.We recorded 10 PD and 10 healthy speakers reading a text. An average of 114 VCV sequences per speaker was obtained. In total, our corpus consisted of 2280 stimuli. For the perception test, 20 adults native speakers of French were instructed that they would be presented utterances produced by different speakers and that they were to identify the sequences and write what they heard. No information was given on the sequence type (VCV).The reported consonant was examined in relation to the intended consonant; the score of distorsion was the number of phonetic features differing from the prototypical consonant. The results were examined as a function of the following/or preceding linguistic factors: consonant nature, oral/nasal vocalic context, class of word (function or content) and prosodic position within sentences.Consonant imprecision was confirmed in the speech of PD speakers. Two groups of patients were observed: the former with a low degree of dysarthria severity and scores of consonant identification close to that of healthy speakers; the latter with a high degree of dysarthria severity and a low identification score.Linguistic factors were shown to affect consonant production and perception. In both normal and PD speech, consonants had more features identified when they belonged to content words, word-initial syllables or final-phrase syllables. This suggests that in Parkinson's disease speech disorders relate to motor control and not to a loss of the linguistic knowledge.
我们研究了语言因素对帕金森病(PD)患者产生的元音间辅音的感知识别的影响。为了消除前后语境的影响,所有元音间的辅音都被切除了一半的前元音和后元音。我们记录了 10 名 PD 患者和 10 名健康人朗读文本的语音。每位说话者平均获得 114 个 VCV 序列。我们的语料库共有 2280 个刺激。在感知测试中,20 名母语为法语的成年人被告知,他们将听到不同说话者的发音,并要求他们识别这些序列并写下他们听到的内容。没有提供关于序列类型(VCV)的信息。报告的辅音与目标辅音有关;失真分数是与原型辅音不同的语音特征的数量。结果根据以下/前面的语言因素进行检查:辅音性质、口腔/鼻音元音环境、单词类别(功能或内容)和句子内的韵律位置。在 PD 患者的言语中证实了辅音不精确。观察到两组患者:前者构音障碍程度较低,辅音识别得分接近健康人;后者构音障碍程度较高,识别得分较低。语言因素被证明会影响辅音的产生和感知。在正常和 PD 语音中,当辅音属于内容词、单词首音节或词末音节时,会有更多的特征被识别。这表明在帕金森病的言语障碍与运动控制有关,而不是与语言知识的丧失有关。