Gullsvåg Malin, Rodríguez-Aranda Claudia
Department of Psychology, UiT the Arctic University of Norway, Tromsø, Norway.
Front Psychol. 2023 Jun 15;14:1150354. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1150354. eCollection 2023.
Respiratory function is linked to sensory, affective, and cognitive processes and it is affected by environmental constraints such as cognitive demands. It is suggested that specific cognitive processes, such as working memory or executive functioning, may impact breathing. In turn, various lines of research have suggested a link between peak expiratory airflow (PEF) and cognitive function. However, there is scarce experimental support to the above assertions, especially regarding spoken language. Therefore, the present investigation aims to evaluate whether breathing varies as a function of performing verbal naming tasks with different difficulty levels.
Thirty healthy young adults, (age = 25.37 years), participated in the study. Participants were required to perform aloud five verbal tasks ranged in order of difficulty: Reading single words, reading a text passage, object naming, semantic and phonemic fluency. A pneumotachograph mask was employed to acquire simultaneously the verbal responses, and three airflow parameters: Duration, peak, and volume at both stages of the respiratory cycle (i.e., inspiration/expiration). Data were analyzed with one-way repeated measures MANOVA.
No significant differences were found between reading single words and object naming. In comparison, distinctive airflow requirements were found for reading a text passage, which were proportionally related to number of pronounced words. Though, the main finding of the study concerns the data on verbal fluency tasks, which not only entailed higher inhaled airflow resources but also a significant PEF.
Our data demonstrated that the most difficult tasks, namely semantic and phonemic verbal fluencies, relying on semantic search, executive function, and fast lexical retrieval of words were those requiring important amount of inhaled airflow and displaying a high peak expiratory airflow. The present findings demonstrated for the first time a direct association between complex verbal tasks and PEF. Inconclusive data related to object naming and reading single words are discussed in light of the methodological challenges inherent to the assessment of speech breathing and cognition in this line of investigation.
呼吸功能与感觉、情感和认知过程相关联,并且会受到诸如认知需求等环境限制因素的影响。有研究表明,诸如工作记忆或执行功能等特定认知过程可能会影响呼吸。反过来,各种研究线索也表明呼气峰值流速(PEF)与认知功能之间存在联系。然而,上述论断缺乏实验支持,尤其是在口语方面。因此,本研究旨在评估呼吸是否会因执行不同难度水平的言语命名任务而发生变化。
30名健康的年轻成年人(年龄 = 25.37岁)参与了该研究。参与者被要求大声执行五项难度递增的言语任务:阅读单字、阅读一篇文章、物体命名、语义流畅性和音素流畅性。使用呼吸速度描记面罩同时获取言语反应以及呼吸周期两个阶段(即吸气/呼气)的三个气流参数:持续时间、峰值和容积。数据采用单因素重复测量多元方差分析进行分析。
阅读单字和物体命名之间未发现显著差异。相比之下,阅读一篇文章时发现了独特的气流需求,这些需求与发音单词的数量成比例相关。不过,该研究的主要发现涉及言语流畅性任务的数据,这些任务不仅需要更多的吸入气流资源,而且呼气峰值流速也显著增加。
我们的数据表明,最困难的任务,即语义流畅性和音素流畅性任务,依赖于语义搜索、执行功能和单词的快速词汇检索,是那些需要大量吸入气流并显示出高呼气峰值流速的任务。本研究结果首次证明了复杂言语任务与呼气峰值流速之间的直接关联。鉴于在这一研究领域中评估言语呼吸和认知所固有的方法学挑战,对与物体命名和阅读单字相关的不确定数据进行了讨论。