Perceptual Learning of Dysarthria in Adolescence

Author:

Borrie Stephanie A.1ORCID,Hepworth Taylor J.1,Wynn Camille J.2,Hustad Katherine C.34ORCID,Barrett Tyson S.5ORCID,Lansford Kaitlin L.6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Communicative Disorders and Deaf Education, Utah State University, Logan

2. Department of Communication Science and Disorders, University of Houston

3. Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin–Madison

4. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of Wisconsin–Madison

5. Department of Psychology, Utah State University, Logan

6. Department of Communication Science and Disorders, Florida State University, Tallahassee

Abstract

Purpose: As evidenced by perceptual learning studies involving adult listeners and speakers with dysarthria, adaptation to dysarthric speech is driven by signal predictability (speaker property) and a flexible speech perception system (listener property). Here, we extend adaptation investigations to adolescent populations and examine whether adult and adolescent listeners can learn to better understand an adolescent speaker with dysarthria. Method: Classified by developmental stage, adult ( n = 42) and adolescent ( n = 40) listeners completed a three-phase perceptual learning protocol (pretest, familiarization, and posttest). During pretest and posttest, all listeners transcribed speech produced by a 13-year-old adolescent with spastic dysarthria associated with cerebral palsy. During familiarization, half of the adult and adolescent listeners engaged in structured familiarization (audio and lexical feedback) with the speech of the adolescent speaker with dysarthria; and the other half, with the speech of a neurotypical adolescent speaker (control). Results: Intelligibility scores increased from pretest to posttest for all listeners. However, listeners who received dysarthria familiarization achieved greater intelligibility improvements than those who received control familiarization. Furthermore, there was a significant effect of developmental stage, where the adults achieved greater intelligibility improvements relative to the adolescents. Conclusions: This study provides the first tranche of evidence that adolescent dysarthric speech is learnable—a finding that holds even for adolescent listeners whose speech perception systems are not yet fully developed. Given the formative role that social interactions play during adolescence, these findings of improved intelligibility afford important clinical implications.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

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