Oral Reading Prosody and Comprehension in Persons With Aphasia: A Preliminary Investigation.

Am J Speech Lang Pathol

Department of Speech Pathology & Audiology, University of South Alabama, Mobile.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study examined the reading prosody of individuals with aphasia (PWA) compared to neurotypical controls to see how it affects reading comprehension.
  • Six PWA and six matched neurotypical controls read aloud from a paragraph and then answered comprehension questions, with prosodic features analyzed using software.
  • Results indicated significant differences in pauses and syllable durations between the groups, suggesting that certain prosodic features in PWA may relate to their comprehension ability, prompting the need for further research with a larger sample size.

Article Abstract

Purpose: This study acoustically characterized the oral reading prosody of persons with aphasia (PWA) and neurotypical controls for a connected text and aimed to determine which prosodic features were most associated with performance on a reading comprehension task.

Method: Six PWA and six neurotypical, age- and education-matched controls participated in this preliminary study. Participants read Paragraph 3 of the Gray Oral Reading Tests-Fifth Edition aloud and subsequently answered five comprehension questions. A total of 11 measures related to phrasing, intonation, and expressivity were extracted using Praat for each participant in order for comparisons to be made across participant groups and associations examined with reading comprehension scores.

Results: The Mann-Whitney test suggested a significant difference between PWA and control participants for intersentential pause durations, pausal intrusion frequency, and duration of pausal-pausal syllables. Although statistically nonsignificant, intersentential pause duration, pausal intrusion frequency, pausal intrusion duration, duration of prepausal syllables, and intensity amplitude following a syntactic juncture were all moderately correlated (all s > .58) with comprehension of Paragraph 3 of the Gray Oral Reading Tests-Fifth Edition in PWA. All measures were weakly correlated with comprehension for the control participants.

Conclusions: PWA demonstrated statistically significant longer durations for intersentential pauses and prepausal syllables, and a greater number of pausal intrusions. Interestingly, three of the five measures moderately correlated to comprehension were those that were statistically different between the two participant groups. As such, preliminary findings of this study warrant further investigation in a larger sample of PWA.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1044/2024_AJSLP-23-00345DOI Listing

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