Department of Speech-Language-Hearing Sciences, Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY.
Department of Communicative Sciences and Disorders, New York University, New York City.
Am J Speech Lang Pathol. 2021 Jun 18;30(3S):1477-1495. doi: 10.1044/2021_AJSLP-20-00167. Epub 2021 Apr 7.
Purpose Variability has been interpreted in differing ways according to context (e.g., development, speech impairment, and learning). A challenge arises when interpreting variability in the context of learning for children with speech impairment characterized by high movement variability, as in childhood apraxia of speech (CAS). The objective of this study is to investigate changes in variability in CAS with practice in comparison to patterns seen in children with non-CAS speech sound disorders (SSD) and typical development. Method Speech production variability was examined in 24 children (5-6 years of age) with CAS, non-CAS SSD, and typical development in production of nonwords of varied motoric complexity. Multidimensional analyses were performed using measures of token-to-token speech consistency (percent word consistency), acoustic variability (acoustic spatiotemporal index), and movement variability (lip aperture spatiotemporal index). Changes in variability were examined in each group of children by comparing the first half to the last half of nonword tokens in the same data collection session. The impact of token complexity on practice effects was also explored across groups of children. Results All children displayed increased speech consistency within this practice period ( .01). Only children with CAS displayed increased movement variability following practice ( .01). Differences in acoustic and kinematic variability were observed across complexity levels in all groups, though these did not interact with practice effects. Discussion These findings suggest that increased movement variability in children with CAS might be facilitating perceptual consistency. It is believed that this finding reflects an inefficient strategy adapted by children with CAS in the absence of motor-based cueing and feedback to guide speech performance with practice.
目的 变异性的解释因语境而异(例如,发展、言语障碍和学习)。当解释言语障碍儿童学习中的变异性时,就会出现挑战,这些儿童的运动变异性很高,例如儿童运动性言语失用症(CAS)。本研究的目的是调查 CAS 随练习而变化的变异性与非 CAS 言语声音障碍(SSD)和典型发育儿童所见模式的比较。
方法 在产生不同运动复杂度的非词时,对 24 名患有 CAS、非 CAS SSD 和典型发育的儿童的言语产生变异性进行了研究。使用音位一致性(单词一致性百分比)、声学变异性(声学时空指数)和运动变异性(唇开口时空指数)的测度,对多维分析进行了分析。通过比较同一次数据收集会话中非词的前一半和后一半,检查每个儿童组中变异性的变化。还在儿童组之间探讨了音位复杂性对练习效果的影响。
结果 所有儿童在这个练习期间都表现出言语一致性增加(.01)。只有 CAS 儿童在练习后表现出运动变异性增加(.01)。所有组在不同复杂程度水平上都观察到了声学和运动学变异性的差异,但这些差异与练习效果没有相互作用。
讨论 这些发现表明,CAS 儿童的运动变异性增加可能有助于知觉一致性。据认为,这一发现反映了 CAS 儿童在缺乏运动为基础的提示和反馈以指导言语表现的情况下,适应了一种效率低下的策略。