Effect of concurrent walking and interlocutor distance on conversational speech intensity and rate in Parkinson's disease
Highlights • Walking and talking increased speech intensity in Parkinson's disease and controls. • Fast walking produced greater speech intensity than slow walking. • Walking and talking did not have a significant effect on speech rate. • Walking and talking was associated with a reduction in w...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Gait & posture 2016-01, Vol.43, p.132-136 |
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creator | McCaig, Cassandra M Adams, Scott G Dykstra, Allyson D Jog, Mandar |
description | Highlights • Walking and talking increased speech intensity in Parkinson's disease and controls. • Fast walking produced greater speech intensity than slow walking. • Walking and talking did not have a significant effect on speech rate. • Walking and talking was associated with a reduction in walking speed. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2015.09.011 |
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subjects | Aged Aged, 80 and over Case-Control Studies Concurrent tasks Humans Interlocutor distance Male Middle Aged Orthopedics Parkinson Disease - physiopathology Parkinson's disease Speech - physiology Speech intensity Speech Production Measurement Walking - physiology Walking speed |
title | Effect of concurrent walking and interlocutor distance on conversational speech intensity and rate in Parkinson's disease |
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