Späth Mona, Aichert Ingrid, Timmann Dagmar, Ceballos-Baumann Andrés O, Wagner-Sonntag Edith, Ziegler Wolfram
Clinical Neuropsychology Research Group (EKN), Institute of Phonetics and Speech Processing, Ludwig Maximilian University Munich, Munich, Germany.
Department of Neurology and Center for Translational and Behavioral Neuroscience (C-TNBS), Essen University Hospital, Essen, Germany.
Cortex. 2022 Dec;157:81-98. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2022.08.012. Epub 2022 Sep 30.
Spoken language is constantly undergoing change: Speakers within and across social and regional groups influence each other's speech, leading to the emergence and drifts of accents in a language. These processes are driven by mutual unintentional imitation of the phonetic details of others' speech in conversational interactions, suggesting that continuous auditory-motor adaptation takes place in interactive language use and plasticity of auditory-motor representations of speech persists across the lifespan. The brain mechanisms underlying this large-scale social-linguistic behavior are still poorly understood.
To investigate the role of cerebellar and basal ganglia dysfunctions in unintended adaptation to the speech rhythm and articulation rate of a second speaker.
Twelve patients with spinocerebellar ataxia type 6 (SCA6), 15 patients with Parkinson's disease (PD), and 27 neurologically healthy controls (CTRL) participated in two interactive speech tasks, i.e., sentence repetition and "turn-taking" (i.e., dyadic interaction with sentences produced by a model speaker). Production of scripted sentences was used as a control task. Two types of sentence rhythm were distinguished, i.e., regular and irregular, and model speech rate was manipulated in 12 steps between 2.9 and 4.0 syllables per second. Acoustic analyses of the participants' utterances were performed to determine the extent to which participants adapted their speech rate and rhythm to the model.
Neurologically healthy speakers showed significant adaptation of rate in all conditions, and of rhythm in the repetition task and partly also the turn-taking task. Patients with PD showed a stronger propensity to adapt than the controls. In contrast, the patients with cerebellar degeneration were largely insensitive to the model speaker's rate and rhythm. Contrary to expectations, sentences with an irregular speech rhythm exerted a stronger adaptive attraction than regular sentences in the two patient groups.
Cerebellar degeneration inhibits the propensity to covertly adapt to others' speech. Striatal dysfunction in Parkinson's disease spares or even promotes the tendency to accommodate to other speakers' speech rate and rhythm.
口语一直在不断变化:社会群体和地区群体内部及之间的说话者相互影响彼此的言语,导致一种语言中口音的出现和变化。这些过程是由对话互动中对他人语音细节的相互无意模仿驱动的,这表明在交互式语言使用中会发生持续的听觉 - 运动适应,并且语音的听觉 - 运动表征的可塑性在整个生命周期中持续存在。这种大规模社会语言行为背后的大脑机制仍知之甚少。
研究小脑和基底神经节功能障碍在对第二位说话者的言语节奏和发音速率的无意适应中的作用。
12名6型脊髓小脑共济失调(SCA6)患者、15名帕金森病(PD)患者和27名神经健康对照者(CTRL)参与了两项交互式言语任务,即句子重复和“轮流对话”(即与示范说话者说出的句子进行二元互动)。朗读预先写好的句子被用作对照任务。区分了两种类型的句子节奏,即规则节奏和不规则节奏,并且示范语速在每秒2.9至4.0个音节之间以12个步骤进行调整。对参与者的话语进行声学分析,以确定参与者在多大程度上使他们的语速和节奏与示范者相匹配。
神经健康的说话者在所有条件下都表现出明显的语速匹配,在重复任务中以及在一定程度上在轮流对话任务中也表现出节奏匹配。帕金森病患者比对照组表现出更强的匹配倾向。相比之下,小脑退化患者对示范说话者的语速和节奏基本不敏感。与预期相反,在两个患者组中,具有不规则言语节奏的句子比规则句子表现出更强的适应性吸引力。
小脑退化会抑制隐性适应他人言语的倾向。帕金森病中的纹状体功能障碍保留甚至促进了适应其他说话者语速和节奏的倾向。