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Connaghan, Kathryn P.; Patel, Rupal – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2017
Purpose: To compare vowel acoustics and intelligibility in words produced with and without contrastive stress by speakers with spastic (mixed-spastic) dysarthria secondary to cerebral palsy (DYS[subscript CP]) and healthy controls (HCs). Method: Fifteen participants (9 men, 6 women; age M = 42 years) with DYS[subscript CP] and 15 HCs (9 men, 6…
Descriptors: Suprasegmentals, Vowels, Acoustics, Articulation Impairments
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Patel, Rupal; Campellone, Pamela – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2009
Purpose: In this study, the authors sought to understand acoustic and perceptual cues to contrastive stress in speakers with dysarthria (DYS) and healthy controls (HC). Method: The production experiment examined the ability of 12 DYS (9 male, 3 female; M = 39 years of age) and 12 age- and gender-matched HC (9 male, 3 female; M = 37.5 years of age)…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Articulation Impairments, Perception, Adults
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Patel, Rupal; Schroeder, Bethany – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2007
Familiarity is thought to aid listeners in decoding disordered speech; however, as the speech signal degrades, the "familiarity advantage" becomes less beneficial. Despite highly unintelligible speech sound production, many children with dysarthria vocalize when interacting with familiar caregivers. Perhaps listeners can understand these…
Descriptors: Identification, Familiarity, Caregivers, Cerebral Palsy
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Patel, Rupal – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2003
Studies of prosodic control in severe dysarthria (DYS) have focused on differences between impaired and nonimpaired speech in terms of the range and variation of fundamental frequency (F0), intensity, and duration. Whether individuals with severe DYS can adequately signal prosodic contrasts and "which" acoustic cues they use to do so has received…
Descriptors: Speech Impairments, Suprasegmentals, Acoustics, Cues