Baum S R, Kim J A, Katz W F
School of Communication Sciences and Disorders, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Brain Lang. 1997 Feb 15;56(3):354-76. doi: 10.1006/brln.1997.1734.
The ability to compensate for fixation of the jaw by a bite block was investigated in 6 nonfluent aphasics, 6 fluent aphasics, and 10 normal control subjects. Acoustic analyses of the vowels [i u a ae] and fricatives [s s] revealed substantial but incomplete compensation for the perturbation in all three subject groups. Perceptual identification scores and quality ratings by naive and phonetically trained listeners indicated poorer identification of the high vowels [i u] under compensatory conditions relative to normal production. Of particular interest was the fact that all three groups of subjects exhibited similar patterns of results. The findings suggest that any deficit in speech motor programming demonstrated by the nonfluent aphasic patients did not affect compensatory abilities. Results are discussed with respect to normal speech adaptation skills and the nature of articulatory breakdown in nonfluent aphasia.
研究了6名非流畅性失语症患者、6名流畅性失语症患者和10名正常对照受试者通过咬块补偿下颌固定的能力。对元音[i u a æ]和擦音[s ʃ]的声学分析表明,所有三组受试者对扰动都有显著但不完全的补偿。未经训练的和经过语音训练的听众进行的感知识别评分和质量评级表明,与正常发音相比,在补偿条件下对高元音[i u]的识别较差。特别有趣的是,所有三组受试者都表现出相似的结果模式。研究结果表明,非流畅性失语症患者表现出的言语运动编程缺陷并不影响补偿能力。针对正常言语适应技能和非流畅性失语症中发音障碍的性质对结果进行了讨论。