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Vol. 58, No. 5, 2006   

Free Abstract     Article (References)     Article (PDF 223 KB)     

Original Paper

Fundamental Frequency as a Perceptual Cue for Vowel Identification in Speakers with Parkinson's Disease
Kate Bunton

Institute for Neurogenic Communication Disorders, University of Arizona, Tucson, Ariz., USA

Address of Corresponding Author

Folia Phoniatr Logop 2006;58:323-339 (DOI: 10.1159/000094567)


 goto top of page Key Words

  • Parkinson's disease
  • Vowel identification
  • Fundamental frequency
  • Speech perception

 goto top of page Abstract

This study investigates the importance of fundamental frequency (F0) as a perceptual cue for identification of vowel targets produced by speakers with Parkinson's disease (PD). It has been suggested in the literature that F0 is a redundant cue for vowel identification in highly intelligible speech. For speakers with dysarthria who are having difficulty with segmental and suprasegmental aspects of production which result in ambiguous or conflicting cues in the acoustic signal, F0 may have increased perceptual importance for accurate identification of vowel targets. In the present study, F0 contours for single-word targets produced in sentence level material by 20 speakers with PD and 20 control speakers were synthetically modified in several different ways (i.e., flattened and enhanced). Listener identification of vowel targets across the F0 conditions was recorded. The accuracy of vowel identification for the control group was not affected by the flattening of the F0 contour. For the speakers with PD, however, modification of the F0 contour (flattening or enhancing) affected the accuracy with which listeners identified certain vowels. Differences in vowel identification were found primarily for the front vowels /I, epsi, æ/ along a high-low continuum.

Copyright © 2006 S. Karger AG, Basel


 goto top of page Author Contacts

Kate Bunton, PhD, Institute for Neurogenic Communication Disorders, Speech and Hearing Sciences
University of Arizona, PO Box 210071
Tucson, AZ 95721-0071 (USA), Tel. +1 520 621 2210
Fax +1 520 626 2226, E-Mail bunton@u.arizona.edu


 goto top of page Article Information

Number of Print Pages : 17
Number of Figures : 1, Number of Tables : 5, Number of References : 55

 
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Medline Abstract (ID 16966834)
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copyright  © 2009 S. Karger AG, Basel