1. A Systematic Review and Bayesian Meta-Analysis of Acoustic Measures of Prosody in Parkinson's Disease.
- Author
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Fumel, Jules, Bahuaud, Delphine, Weed, Ethan, Fusaroli, Riccardo, and Basirat, Anahita
- Subjects
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RESEARCH funding , *PARKINSON'S disease , *BASAL ganglia , *META-analysis , *VERBAL behavior testing , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *MEDLINE , *SPEECH evaluation , *ONLINE information services , *REGRESSION analysis , *ARTICULATION (Speech) , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *DISEASE complications ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech - Abstract
Purpose: Linguistic prosody is affected in Parkinson's disease (PD), which implicates the basal ganglia's role in the production of prosody. However, there is no recent systematic synthesis of the available acoustic evidence of prosodic impairment in PD. This study aimed to identify the acoustic features of linguistic prosody that are consistently affected in PD. Method: The authors systematically reviewed articles that reported acoustic features of prosodic production in PD. Articles focused on fundamental frequency (F0) and its variability, intensity and its variability, speech and articulation rate, and pause duration and ratio. From a total of 648 records identified, 36 met criteria for inclusion and exclusion. For each acoustic measurement and task, data from people with PD (PwPD) were compared with those from controls to extract effect sizes. Pooled effect sizes were estimated using robust Bayesian hierarchical regression models. Results: PD was associated with decreased F0 variability and increased pause duration. There was limited evidence of reduced intensity variability and speech rate in PwPD. No evidence was found to suggest that PD affects articulation rate or pause ratio. Conclusions: The primary acoustic parameters of prosody affected by PD are F0 variability and pause duration. The identification of these acoustic parameters has important clinical implications for the selection of PD management strategies. The association of F0 variability and pause duration with PD suggests that the neural circuits controlling these parameters are at least partly shared and might include the basal ganglia. While the current study focused on the phonetic realization of prosodic cues, future studies should examine whether and how PD affects prosody at higher levels of processing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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