The effect of intensive speech rate and intonation therapy on intelligibility in Parkinson's disease

J Commun Disord. 2015 Nov-Dec:58:91-105. doi: 10.1016/j.jcomdis.2015.10.004. Epub 2015 Oct 14.

Abstract

Purpose: Most studies on treatment of prosody in individuals with dysarthria due to Parkinson's disease are based on intensive treatment of loudness. The present study investigates the effect of intensive treatment of speech rate and intonation on the intelligibility of individuals with dysarthria due to Parkinson's disease.

Methods: A one group pretest-posttest design was used to compare intelligibility, speech rate, and intonation before and after treatment. Participants included eleven Dutch-speaking individuals with predominantly moderate dysarthria due to Parkinson's disease, who received five one-hour treatment sessions per week during three weeks. Treatment focused on lowering speech rate and magnifying the phrase final intonation contrast between statements and questions. Intelligibility was perceptually assessed using a standardized sentence intelligibility test. Speech rate was automatically assessed during the sentence intelligibility test as well as during a passage reading task and a storytelling task. Intonation was perceptually assessed using a sentence reading task and a sentence repetition task, and also acoustically analyzed in terms of maximum fundamental frequency.

Results: After treatment, there was a significant improvement of sentence intelligibility (effect size .83), a significant increase of pause frequency during the passage reading task, a significant improvement of correct listener identification of statements and questions, and a significant increase of the maximum fundamental frequency in the final syllable of questions during both intonation tasks.

Conclusion: The findings suggest that participants were more intelligible and more able to manipulate pause frequency and statement-question intonation after treatment. However, the relationship between the change in intelligibility on the one hand and the changes in speech rate and intonation on the other hand is not yet fully understood. Results are nuanced in the light of the operated research design.

Learning outcomes: The reader will be able to: (1) describe the effect of intensive speech rate and intonation treatment on intelligibility of speakers with dysarthria due to PD, (2) describe the effect of intensive speech rate treatment on rate manipulation by speakers with dysarthria due to PD, and (3) describe the effect of intensive intonation treatment on manipulation of the phrase final intonation contrast between statements and questions by speakers with dysarthria due to PD.

Keywords: Dysarthria; Intelligibility; Intonation; Parkinson's disease; Prosody; Speech rate; Speech therapy.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Dysarthria / etiology
  • Dysarthria / physiopathology
  • Dysarthria / therapy*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Parkinson Disease / complications*
  • Parkinson Disease / physiopathology
  • Speech / physiology*
  • Speech Intelligibility / physiology*
  • Speech Production Measurement