Perceptual speech characteristics of dysarthric speakers following severe closed head injury

The perceptual speech characteristics of a group of 20 severely closed head-injured (CHI) subjects were compared with those of a normal non-neurologically impaired control group matched for age and sex. The CHI subjects were found to be significantly less intelligible than the controls, and exhibite...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain injury 1994, Vol.8 (2), p.101-124
Hauptverfasser: Theodoros, Deborah G., Murdoch, Bruce E., Chenery, Helen J.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The perceptual speech characteristics of a group of 20 severely closed head-injured (CHI) subjects were compared with those of a normal non-neurologically impaired control group matched for age and sex. The CHI subjects were found to be significantly less intelligible than the controls, and exhibited deficits in the prosodic, resonatory, articulatory, respiratory and phonatory aspects of speech production. The most frequently occurring deviant speech dimensions related to disturbances of prosody, resonance, articulation and respiration, with those deviant speech dimensions pertaining to phonation being less apparent in the speech of the CHI subjects. The findings are discussed in relation to the heterogeneity of the CHI population and the effects of CHI on neuromuscular function. The study highlights the need for accurate, instrumental physiological evaluation of the motor subsystems involved in speech production.
ISSN:0269-9052
1362-301X
DOI:10.3109/02699059409150963