This study explored prosodic production in latent aphasia, a mild form of aphasia associated with left-hemisphere brain damage (e.g., stroke). Unlike prior research on moderate to severe aphasia, the researchers investigated latent aphasia, which can seem to have very similar speech production with neurotypical speech.
The researchers analyzed the fundamental frequency (f0), intensity, and duration of utterance-initial and utterance-final words of ten speakers with latent aphasia and ten matching controls. Regression models revealed varying degrees of differences in all three prosodic measures between the groups. The latent aphasia group showed longer word durations and used f0 and intensity differently in utterance-initial and utterance-final positions compared to the control group.
The researchers also investigated the diagnostic classification of latent aphasia versus neurotypical control using random forest models. The models achieved high accuracy in distinguishing the two groups, with prosodic features playing a crucial role. The results suggest that subtle prosodic differences can be leveraged to build reliable automated tools to assist with the identification of latent aphasia, which often goes undetected on standard clinical assessments.
The findings highlight the merits of prosodic research in identifying subtle pathological differences in language and cognition, even in cases where standard clinical tests do not reveal any overt deficits. The study paves the way for future research on subclinical and hidden cognitive-linguistic problems using advanced speech analysis techniques.
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by Cong Zhang, ... um arxiv.org 09-25-2024
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2408.11882.pdfTiefere Fragen