speech fluency
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer Chesters ◽  
Riikka Möttönen ◽  
Kate E Watkins

In a randomised controlled trial, we showed that a five-day intervention combining anodal transcranial direct current stimulation over the left inferior frontal cortex with temporary speech fluency enhancing techniques reduces stuttering. Speech fluency was unchanged by the fluency training alone, as predicted. Here, we report the neural changes associated with the intervention, measured using functional MRI during sentence reading before the training and one-week later. We obtained imaging data in 25 adult men who stutter (median age = 32 y, inter-quartile range = 11) at the pre-intervention baseline and again one-week post-intervention. A control group of 15 adult men who do not stutter (median age = 30 y, inter-quartile range = 10) and did not complete the intervention were scanned on one occasion. In a whole-brain analysis of perceptibly fluent sentence reading, we compared the change in task-evoked neural activity in the sub-group of men who stutter who had received active stimulation during the intervention (N=13) with those who had sham stimulation (N=12). We hypothesised that the combination of anodal stimulation over the left inferior frontal cortex and fluency-enhancing training would result in lasting change to the brain networks supporting fluent speech production. An additional region-of-interest analysis explored effects on basal ganglia nuclei, which are thought to have a key role in the casual mechanism of stuttering, and which we hypothesised would be engaged by the behavioural approach used during training (choral and metronome-timed speaking). One week after the intervention, the group who had received active transcranial stimulation showed increased activity in speech-related brain regions, relative to the group who had received sham stimulation. Cortically, these changes were evident in left inferior frontal cortex (pars opercularis and orbitalis), anterior insula, anterior superior temporal gyrus, anterior cingulate cortex, and supplementary motor area. Subcortically, activation increased in the caudate nuclei and putamen bilaterally, and in right globus pallidus and thalamus. Together these regions form cortico-striatal-thalamo-cortical loops involved in the planning and initiation and control of speech movements.Our findings reveal that the mechanism of action of the tDCS intervention involved increasing activity across the network involved in the production of fluent speech, indicating that tDCS can be used to promote neural plasticity to strengthen networks supporting natural fluency. This study advances the potential of using non-invasive brain stimulation to improve therapy efficacy for those people who stutter who choose to work on increasing fluency.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierpaolo Busan ◽  
Beatrice Moret ◽  
Fabio Masina ◽  
Giovanni Del Ben ◽  
Gianluca Campana

Developmental stuttering (DS) is a disturbance of the normal rhythm of speech that may be interpreted as very debilitating in the most affected cases. Interventions for DS are historically based on the behavioral modifications of speech patterns (e.g., through speech therapy), which are useful to regain a better speech fluency. However, a great variability in intervention outcomes is normally observed, and no definitive evidence is currently available to resolve stuttering, especially in the case of its persistence in adulthood. In the last few decades, DS has been increasingly considered as a functional disturbance, affecting the correct programming of complex motor sequences such as speech. Compatibly, understanding of the neurophysiological bases of DS has dramatically improved, thanks to neuroimaging, and techniques able to interact with neural tissue functioning [e.g., non-invasive brain stimulation (NIBS)]. In this context, the dysfunctional activity of the cortico-basal-thalamo-cortical networks, as well as the defective patterns of connectivity, seems to play a key role, especially in sensorimotor networks. As a consequence, a direct action on the functionality of “defective” or “impaired” brain circuits may help people who stutter to manage dysfluencies in a better way. This may also “potentiate” available interventions, thus favoring more stable outcomes of speech fluency. Attempts aiming at modulating (and improving) brain functioning of people who stutter, realized by using NIBS, are quickly increasing. Here, we will review these recent advancements being applied to the treatment of DS. Insights will be useful not only to assess whether the speech fluency of people who stutter may be ameliorated by acting directly on brain functioning but also will provide further suggestions about the complex and dynamic pathophysiology of DS, where causal effects and “adaptive''/‘‘maladaptive” compensation mechanisms may be strongly overlapped. In conclusion, this review focuses future research toward more specific, targeted, and effective interventions for DS, based on neuromodulation of brain functioning.


2021 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Natalia Parjane ◽  
Sunghye Cho ◽  
Sharon Ash ◽  
Katheryn A.Q. Cousins ◽  
Sanjana Shellikeri ◽  
...  

Background: Progressive supranuclear palsy syndrome (PSPS) and corticobasal syndrome (CBS) as well as non-fluent/agrammatic primary progressive aphasia (naPPA) are often associated with misfolded 4-repeat tau pathology, but the diversity of the associated speech features is poorly understood. Objective: Investigate the full range of acoustic and lexical properties of speech to test the hypothesis that PSPS-CBS show a subset of speech impairments found in naPPA. Methods: Acoustic and lexical measures, extracted from natural, digitized semi-structured speech samples using novel, automated methods, were compared in PSPS-CBS (n = 87), naPPA (n = 25), and healthy controls (HC, n = 41). We related these measures to grammatical performance and speech fluency, core features of naPPA, to neuropsychological measures of naming, executive, memory and visuoconstructional functioning, and to cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) phosphorylated tau (pTau) levels in patients with available biofluid analytes. Results: Both naPPA and PSPS-CBS speech produced shorter speech segments, longer pauses, higher pause rates, reduced fundamental frequency (f0) pitch ranges, and slower speech rate compared to HC. naPPA speech was distinct from PSPS-CBS with shorter speech segments, more frequent pauses, slower speech rate, reduced verb production, and higher partial word production. In both groups, acoustic duration measures generally correlated with speech fluency, measured as words per minute, and grammatical performance. Speech measures did not correlate with standard neuropsychological measures. CSF pTau levels correlated with f0 range in PSPS-CBS and naPPA. Conclusion: Lexical and acoustic speech features of PSPS-CBS overlaps those of naPPA and are related to CSF pTau levels.


Author(s):  
HeeCheong Chon ◽  
Eric S. Jackson ◽  
Shelly Jo Kraft ◽  
Nicoline G. Ambrose ◽  
Torrey M. Loucks

Purpose The purpose of this study was to test whether adults who stutter (AWS) display a different range of sensitivity to delayed auditory feedback (DAF). Two experiments were conducted to assess the fluency of AWS under long-latency DAF and to test the effect of short-latency DAF on speech kinematic variability in AWS. Method In Experiment 1, 15 AWS performed a conversational speaking task under nonaltered auditory feedback and 250-ms DAF. The rates of stuttering-like disfluencies, other disfluencies, and speech errors and articulation rate were compared. In Experiment 2, 13 AWS and 15 adults who do not stutter (AWNS) read three utterances under four auditory feedback conditions: nonaltered auditory feedback, amplified auditory feedback, 25-ms DAF, and 50-ms DAF. Across-utterance kinematic variability (spatiotemporal index) and within-utterance variability (percent determinism and stability) were compared between groups. Results In Experiment 1, under 250-ms DAF, the rate of stuttering-like disfluencies and speech errors increased significantly, while articulation rate decreased significantly in AWS. In Experiment 2, AWS exhibited higher kinematic variability than AWNS across the feedback conditions. Under 25-ms DAF, the spatiotemporal index of AWS decreased significantly compared to the other feedback conditions. AWS showed lower overall percent determinism than AWNS, but their percent determinism increased under 50-ms DAF to approximate that of AWNS. Conclusions Auditory feedback manipulations can alter speech fluency and kinematic variability in AWS. Longer latency auditory feedback delays induce speech disruptions, while subtle auditory feedback manipulations potentially benefit speech motor control. Both AWS and AWNS are susceptible to auditory feedback during speech production, but AWS appear to exhibit a distinct continuum of sensitivity.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 704
Author(s):  
Kari-Anne B. Næss ◽  
Egil Nygaard ◽  
Hilde Hofslundsengen ◽  
J. Scott Yaruss

The present study (a) addressed difficulties in speech fluency in children with Down syndrome and typically developing children at a similar non-verbal level and (b) examined the association between difficulties with speech fluency and language skills in children with Down syndrome. Data from a cross-sectional parent survey that included questions about children’s difficulties with speech fluency, as well as clinical tests from a national age cohort of 43 six-year-olds with Down syndrome and 57 young typically developing children, were collected. Fisher’s exact test, Student’s t-test, linear regression, and density ellipse scatter plots were used for analysis. There was a significantly higher occurrence of parent-reported difficulties with speech fluency in the children with Down syndrome. Higher language scores were significantly associated with a lower degree of difficulties; this association was strongest for vocabulary and phonological skills. Although difficulties with speech fluency were not reported for all children with Down syndrome, a substantially higher occurrence of such difficulties was reported compared to that for typically developing children. The significant association between difficulties with speech fluency and the level of language functioning suggests that speech fluency and language skills should be taken into consideration when planning treatment for children with Down syndrome.


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