Objective: Acoustic phonetic methods are useful in examining some symptoms of schizophrenia; we used such methods to understand the underpinnings of aprosody. We hypothesized that, compared to controls and patients without clinically rated aprosody, patients with aprosody would exhibit reduced variability in: pitch (F0), jaw/mouth opening and tongue height (formant F1), tongue front/back position and/or lip rounding (formant F2), and intensity/loudness.
Methods: Audiorecorded speech was obtained from 98 patients (including 25 with clinically rated aprosody and 29 without) and 102 unaffected controls using five tasks: one describing a drawing, two based on spontaneous speech elicited through a question (Tasks 2 and 3), and two based on reading prose excerpts (Tasks 4 and 5). We compared groups on variation in pitch (F0), formant F1 and F2, and intensity/loudness.
Results: Regarding pitch variation, patients with aprosody differed significantly from controls in Task 5 in both unadjusted tests and those adjusted for sociodemographics. For the standard deviation (SD) of F1, no significant differences were found in adjusted tests. Regarding SD of F2, patients with aprosody had lower values than controls in Task 3, 4, and 5. For variation in intensity/loudness, patients with aprosody had lower values than patients without aprosody and controls across the five tasks.
Conclusions: Findings could represent a step toward developing new methods for measuring and tracking the severity of this specific negative symptom using acoustic phonetic parameters; such work is relevant to other psychiatric and neurological disorders.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.schres.2018.01.007 | DOI Listing |
Schizophr Res
May 2023
Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, Department of Psychiatry, New York, NY, USA; New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, NY, USA. Electronic address:
Objective: Acoustic phonetic measures have been found to correlate with negative symptoms of schizophrenia, thus offering a path toward quantitative measurement of such symptoms. These acoustic properties include F1 and F2 measurements (affected by tongue height and tongue forward/back position, respectively), which determine a general "vowel space." Among patients and controls, we consider two phonetic measures of vowel space: average Euclidean distance from a participant's mean F1 and mean F2, and density of vowels around one standard deviation of mean F1 and of F2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSchizophr Res
July 2018
The University of Georgia, Institute for Artificial Intelligence, Athens, GA, USA.
Objective: Acoustic phonetic methods are useful in examining some symptoms of schizophrenia; we used such methods to understand the underpinnings of aprosody. We hypothesized that, compared to controls and patients without clinically rated aprosody, patients with aprosody would exhibit reduced variability in: pitch (F0), jaw/mouth opening and tongue height (formant F1), tongue front/back position and/or lip rounding (formant F2), and intensity/loudness.
Methods: Audiorecorded speech was obtained from 98 patients (including 25 with clinically rated aprosody and 29 without) and 102 unaffected controls using five tasks: one describing a drawing, two based on spontaneous speech elicited through a question (Tasks 2 and 3), and two based on reading prose excerpts (Tasks 4 and 5).
BMC Neurol
August 2017
Department of Anesthesiology, St. Marianna University School of Medicine, Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan.
Background: Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) has recently been reported to be effective for truncal postural abnormalities such as camptocormia and Pisa syndrome in Parkinson's disease. In this case report, we describe a case of a woman with Parkinson's disease in whom SCS was effective for painful camptocormia with Pisa syndrome.
Case Presentation: A 65-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of painful camptocormia.
Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat
June 2014
Roche SAS, Medical Affairs Department, Boulogne-Billancourt, France.
The negative symptoms of schizophrenia represent an impairment of normal emotional responses, thought processes and behaviors, and include blunting or flattening of affect, alogia/aprosody, avolition/apathy, anhedonia, and asociality. Negative symptoms contribute to a reduced quality of life, increased functional disability, increased burden of illness, and poorer long-term outcomes, to a greater degree than positive symptoms. Primary negative symptoms are prominent and persistent in up to 26% of patients with schizophrenia, and they are estimated to occur in up to 58% of outpatients at any given time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSchizophr Res
December 2012
Institute for Artificial Intelligence, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA, United States.
Background: Aprosody, or flattened speech intonation, is a recognized negative symptom of schizophrenia, though it has rarely been studied from a linguistic/phonological perspective. To bring the latest advances in computational linguistics to the phenomenology of schizophrenia and related psychotic disorders, a clinical first-episode psychosis research team joined with a phonetics/computational linguistics team to conduct a preliminary, proof-of-concept study.
Methods: Video recordings from a semi-structured clinical research interview were available from 47 first-episode psychosis patients.
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