Keywords
acquired apraxia of speech, aphasia, speech production, motor speech disorders
Abstract
Background Acquired apraxia of speech (AOS) involves speech-production deficits on both the segmental and suprasegmental levels. Recent research has identified a non-linear interaction between the metrical structure of bisyllabic words and word-production accuracy in German speakers with AOS, with trochaic words (strong–weak stress) being resistant to errors compared with iambic words (weak–strong).
Aims To replicate previous findings in English speakers with AOS, to measure the test–retest reliability of the effect, and to examine the potential impact of different methods of word scoring.
Methods & Procedures Speech samples were collected from 27 speakers with AOS and aphasia. Participants were at least 12 months post-stroke or penetrating brain injury, and represented a large range of AOS and aphasia severities. Productions were elicited via verbal model. Sampling was conducted on three separate occasions: the initial data-collection session and then repeated samplings at 1- and 4-week intervals. Bisyllabic words with a CVCVC segmental structure were selected. The list was divided into sublists representing differing lexical stress patterns: A list of 42 trochees, and one of 37 iambs. All speech samples were phonetically transcribed and then aligned with canonical transcriptions via an edit distance algorithm that followed transcription alignment principles. Phonetic-level errors (distortions) were penalized less severely than phonemic-level errors. Per cent consonants correct and whole-word accuracy were also examined. Trochee and iamb lists were analysed separately.
Outcomes & Results Paired samples t-tests indicated that the modified edit distance was significantly lower for the trochee lists than for the iamb lists. There was a lack of a significant effect of time on the absolute difference between modified edit distance for both lists. Intraclass coefficients suggested the list and procedures used are appropriate as an outcome measure for group research.
Conclusions & Implications The results suggest that in English, as in German, the trochaic structure is more resistant to segmental errors in persons with AOS and aphasia, providing replication of the findings of Aichert et al. in 2016. Further, this effect is stable over repeated sampling occasions. Implications for clinical management of AOS include possible ways to scaffold item difficulty and potentially improve stimulus generalization.
Original Publication Citation
Bailey, D. J., Bunker, L., Mauszycki, S., & Wambaugh, J. L. (2019). Reliability and stability of the metrical stress effect on segmental production accuracy in persons with apraxia of speech. International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 54(6), 902-913. https://doi.org/10.1111/1460-6984.12493
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Bailey, Dallin J.; Bunker, Lisa; Mauszycki, Shannon; and Wambaugh, Julie L., "Reliability and Stability of the Metrical Stress Effect on Segmental Production Accuracy in Persons with Apraxia of Speech" (2019). Faculty Publications. 9436.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/facpub/9436
Document Type
Peer-Reviewed Article
Publication Date
2019-07-23
Publisher
International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders
Language
English
College
David O. McKay School of Education
Department
Communication Disorders
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