1. Acoustic Breathiness Index for the Japanese-Speaking Population: Validation Study and Exploration of Affecting Factors
- Author
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Youri Maryn, Masanori Umatani, Toshihiko Iwahashi, Carlos A. Ferrer-Riesgo, Mio Iwahashi, Misao Yoshida, Ben Barsties v. Latoszek, Makoto Ogawa, Akira Miyauchi, Hidenori Inohara, Kiyohito Hosokawa, Shinobu Iwaki, Chieri Kato, and Naoki Matsushiro
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Linguistics and Language ,Validation study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Index (economics) ,Population ,Audiology ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Severity of Illness Index ,Speech Acoustics ,Language and Linguistics ,Speech and Hearing ,Japan ,Speech Production Measurement ,medicine ,Humans ,Speech communication ,education ,Breathy voice ,Aged ,Respiratory Sounds ,education.field_of_study ,Hoarseness ,Age differences ,Reproducibility of Results ,Regression analysis ,Middle Aged ,Dysphonia ,ROC Curve ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Psychology - Abstract
ObjectivesThe purposes of this study were to validate the Acoustic Breathiness Index (ABI) for the Japanese-speaking population and to determine whether it is independent of factors such as sex, age, and perceptual ratings of roughness.MethodFirst, the concurrent validity of the ABI for perceptual breathiness was evaluated on the concatenations of continuous speech and sustained vowels from 288 patients with varying degrees of dysphonia. The diagnostic accuracy was examined on 343 samples with 55 additional normophonic speakers. Second, the validity related to responsiveness-to-change was estimated on 222 samples obtained before and after interventions for 111 voice-disordered patients. Third, the relationships between the ABI and other variables (i.e., perceptual hoarseness/breathiness/roughness, sex, and age) were explored using bivariate and multivariate analyses for the 288 patients.ResultsFirst, the concurrent validity and the responsiveness-to-change validity were confirmed by strong correlation coefficients of .890 and .878, respectively. Second, the receiver operating characteristic analysis showed the area under the curve to be 0.939, indicating excellent accuracy. The ABI of 3.44 exhibited a sensitivity of 76.3% and a specificity of 94.1%. Third, although bivariate analyses revealed a weak relationship between ABI and roughness and an ABI difference by age, multiple regression analyses showed a strong relation between only ABI and breathiness, without a meaningful contribution from roughness, sex, and age factors.ConclusionThe study confirmed that the ABI is an accurate and specific tool to estimate breathiness levels in the Japanese-speaking population and neither roughness, sex, nor age significantly affects the ABI.
- Published
- 2019
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