Faculty Publications
Speech Timing In Apraxia Of Speech Versus Conduction Aphasia
Document Type
Article
Keywords
Aphasia, Apraxia, Speech variability, Temporal coordination
Journal/Book/Conference Title
Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
Volume
39
Issue
3
First Page
590
Last Page
603
Abstract
This study examined temporal parameters of speech in subjects with apraxia of speech, conduction aphasia, and normal speech. They were asked to repeat target words in a carrier phrase 10 times. Acoustic analyses involved measurement of stop gap duration, voice onset time, vowel nucleus duration, and consonant-vowel (CV) duration. Speakers with apraxia of speech had longer and more variable stop gap, vowel, and CV durations than did subjects with aphasia or normal speech. Speakers with conduction aphasia had longer vowel durations and CV durations than subjects with normal speech. Also, subjects with apraxia of speech showed greater token-to-token variability than the other subject groups. The variability shown by subjects with apraxia of speech was significantly correlated with perceptual judgments of their speech. The significance of these results is discussed in the context of motoric and phonological explanations for apraxia of speech and conduction aphasia. © 1996, American Speech-Language-Hearing Association.
Department
Department of Communicative Disorders
Original Publication Date
1-1-1996
DOI of published version
10.1044/jshr.3903.590
Recommended Citation
Seddoh, Samuel A.K.; Robin, Donald; Sim, Hyun Sub; Hageman, Carlin; Moon, Jerald B.; and Folkins, John W., "Speech Timing In Apraxia Of Speech Versus Conduction Aphasia" (1996). Faculty Publications. 4189.
https://scholarworks.uni.edu/facpub/4189