What is apraxia of speech?

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Coarticulation in apraxia of speech: an acoustic study of non-words Authors : Sandra P Whiteside and Rosemary A. Varley

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Coarticulation in apraxia of speech: an acoustic study of non-words Authors : Sandra P Whiteside and Rosemary A. Varley. What is apraxia of speech?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: What is apraxia of speech?

Coarticulation in apraxia of speech: an acoustic study of non-words

Authors : Sandra P Whiteside and Rosemary A. Varley

Page 2: What is apraxia of speech?

What is apraxia of speech?•Apraxia of speech is a motor speech

disorder which results from lesion of the language dominant hemisphere in the region of frontal pre-motor cortex (Whiteside, & Varley, 1998).

•In other words, apraxia of speech is a motor speech disorder where there is a disconnection between the brain and the articulators.

Page 3: What is apraxia of speech?

Purpose

•Investigate the coarticulatory and temporal patterns of single syllabic non-words produced by a normal speaker and a speaker with apraxia of speech .

• Coarticulation: the concept that the articulators are constantly moving into position for other segments over a stretch of speech (Articulatory and Phonological Impairments: A Clinical Focus).

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Main Focus

•Aim to see whether there are reduced coarticulation patterns in the production of non-word syllables.

Page 5: What is apraxia of speech?

Subjects• 2 subjects :

1. AD : severe apraxia of speech2. RM: control subject with normal speech

- Both subjects were 48 year old police officers

- Both subjects were from South Yorkshire* Investigators wanted subjects to have

similar regional accents

- Both subjects were from similar socioeconomic statuses

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Data• Subjects were asked to repeat 22 monosyllabic CV or

CVC non-words following an experimenter.

• Speech stimuli were recorded for both subjects.

• Once plotted, the data showed the second subject had stepper slopes in all cases compared to the first subject.

• Researchers linked that to more coarticulation for the control speaker and reduced articulation for the speaker with apraxia.

• Additional data was collected on coarticulation with schwa patterns, and it replicated the same results from the previous findings.

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Results

•Reduced coarticulation and lengthened durational patterns in the data of the speaker with apraxia of speech.