31 results on '"Tykalova T"'
Search Results
2. EP 10. Pallidal stimulation affects speech fluency in dystonia
- Author
-
Rusz, J., primary, Tykalova, T., additional, Fecikova, A., additional, Urgosik, D., additional, and Jech, R., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. J17 Could Antipsychotic Medication Influence Speech In Huntington's Disease?
- Author
-
Rusz, J., primary, Klempir, J., additional, Tykalova, T., additional, Baborova, E., additional, mejla, R., additional, R i ka, E., additional, and Roth, J., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Acoustic analyses of vocal expression of contrastive stress in Parkinson's disease
- Author
-
Tykalova, T., Jan Rusz, Cmejla, R., Ruzickova, H., and Ruzicka, E.
5. Acoustic findings of voice disorders in Huntington's disease compared to Parkinson's disease
- Author
-
Jan Rusz, Klempir, J., Baborova, E., Tykalova, T., Majerova, V., Cmejla, R., Ruzicka, E., and Roth, J.
6. COULD ANTIPSYCHOTIC MEDICATION INFLUENCE SPEECH IN HUNTINGTON'S DISEASE?
- Author
-
Rusz, J., Jiri Klempir, Tykalova, T., Baborova, E., Cmejla, R., Ruzicka, E., and Roth, J.
7. Acoustic evaluation of vowel articulation in early Parkinson's disease: effect of pharmacotherapy
- Author
-
Jan Rusz, Cmejla, R., Tykalova, T., Ruzickova, H., Klempir, J., Majerova, V., Picmausova, J., Roth, J., and Ruzicka, E.
8. Automated Vowel Articulation Analysis in Connected Speech Among Progressive Neurological Diseases, Dysarthria Types, and Dysarthria Severities.
- Author
-
Illner V, Tykalova T, Skrabal D, Klempir J, and Rusz J
- Subjects
- Humans, Dysarthria etiology, Speech physiology, Articulation Disorders, Atrophy, Speech Acoustics, Speech Intelligibility, Cerebellar Ataxia, Parkinson Disease complications
- Abstract
Purpose: Although articulatory impairment represents distinct speech characteristics in most neurological diseases affecting movement, methods allowing automated assessments of articulation deficits from the connected speech are scarce. This study aimed to design a fully automated method for analyzing dysarthria-related vowel articulation impairment and estimate its sensitivity in a broad range of neurological diseases and various types and severities of dysarthria., Method: Unconstrained monologue and reading passages were acquired from 459 speakers, including 306 healthy controls and 153 neurological patients. The algorithm utilized a formant tracker in combination with a phoneme recognizer and subsequent signal processing analysis., Results: Articulatory undershoot of vowels was presented in a broad spectrum of progressive neurodegenerative diseases, including Parkinson's disease, progressive supranuclear palsy, multiple-system atrophy, Huntington's disease, essential tremor, cerebellar ataxia, multiple sclerosis, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, as well as in related dysarthria subtypes including hypokinetic, hyperkinetic, ataxic, spastic, flaccid, and their mixed variants. Formant ratios showed a higher sensitivity to vowel deficits than vowel space area. First formants of corner vowels were significantly lower for multiple-system atrophy than cerebellar ataxia. Second formants of vowels /a/ and /i/ were lower in ataxic compared to spastic dysarthria. Discriminant analysis showed a classification score of up to 41.0% for disease type, 39.3% for dysarthria type, and 49.2% for dysarthria severity. Algorithm accuracy reached an F-score of 0.77., Conclusions: Distinctive vowel articulation alterations reflect underlying pathophysiology in neurological diseases. Objective acoustic analysis of vowel articulation has the potential to provide a universal method to screen motor speech disorders., Supplemental Material: https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.23681529.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The automated screening of speech motor development in children based on the sequential motion rate.
- Author
-
Cmejla R, Novotny M, Rusz J, Tykalova T, Vimr J, and Hlavnicka J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Humans, Male, Child, Female, Child, Preschool, Aged, Language, Acoustics, Speech, Voice
- Abstract
Background: Motor skills in children have traditionally been examined via challenging speech tasks such as syllable repetition, and calculating the syllabic rate using a stopwatch or by inspecting the oscillogram followed by a laborious comparison of the scores on a look-up table representing the typical performances of children of the given age and sex. As the commonly used performance tables are over-simplified to allow for manual scoring, we raise the question of whether a computational model of motor skills development could be more informative, and could allow for the automated screening of children to detect underdeveloped motor skills., Methods: We recruited a total of 275 children aged four to 15 years. All the participants were native Czech speakers with no history of hearing or neurological impairments. We recorded each child's performance of/pa/-/ta/-/ka/syllable repetition. Various parameters of diadochokinesis (DDK; DDK rate, DDK regularity, voice onset time [VOT] ratio, syllable, vowel and VOT duration) were investigated in the acoustic signals using supervised reference labels. Female and male participants were analyzed separately by comparing younger, middle, and older age groups of children via ANOVA. Finally, we implemented a fully automated model that estimated the developmental age of a child based on the acoustic signal, and evaluated its accuracy using Pearson's correlation coefficient and normalized root-mean-squared errors (RMSEs)., Results: The DDK rate reflected the ages of the children proportionally (p < 0.001). Other DDK parameters also showed strong sensitivity to age (p < 0.001), with the exception of VOT duration, which had a smaller effect (p = 0.091). The effect of age was found to be sex specific for the syllable length (p < 0.001) and DDK rate (p = 0.003). We observed that females spoke more slowly and had a longer VOT at preschool age (p < 0.001). The DDK rate obtained via the automated algorithm was strongly correlated with the reference (p < 0.001, Pearson's correlation coefficient of 0.97), with a low normalized RMSE of 3.77%., Conclusions: As children develop their motor skills, they are capable of shortening the vowels to increase the rate of syllabic repetitions. The nonlinear development in childhood and adolescence, with a steady state in adulthood, follows a logistic function for the DDK rate. This study demonstrates that the development of motor skills can be examined sensitively and more appropriately by a fully automated noninvasive procedure that also accounts for the dispersion of values within age brackets., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None Declared., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Speech biomarkers in Huntington's disease: A cross-sectional study in pre-symptomatic, prodromal and early manifest stages.
- Author
-
Kouba T, Frank W, Tykalova T, Mühlbäck A, Klempíř J, Lindenberg KS, Landwehrmeyer GB, and Rusz J
- Subjects
- Humans, Speech, Cross-Sectional Studies, Biomarkers, Huntington Disease complications, Huntington Disease genetics, Huntington Disease psychology, Cognition Disorders complications
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: Motor speech alterations are a prominent feature of clinically manifest Huntington's disease (HD). Objective acoustic analysis of speech can quantify speech alterations. It is currently unknown, however, at what stage of HD speech alterations can be reliably detected. We aimed to explore the patterns and extent of speech alterations using objective acoustic analysis in HD and to assess correlations with both rater-assessed phenotypical features and biological determinants of HD., Methods: Speech samples were acquired from 44 premanifest (29 pre-symptomatic and 15 prodromal) and 25 manifest HD gene expansion carriers, and 25 matched healthy controls. A quantitative automated acoustic analysis of 10 speech dimensions was performed., Results: Automated speech analysis allowed us to differentiate between participants with HD and controls, with areas under the curve of 0.74 for pre-symptomatic, 0.92 for prodromal, and 0.97 for manifest stages. In addition to irregular alternating motion rates and prolonged pauses seen only in manifest HD, both prodromal and manifest HD displayed slowed articulation rate, slowed alternating motion rates, increased loudness variability, and unstable steady-state position of articulators. In participants with premanifest HD, speech alteration severity was associated with cognitive slowing (r = -0.52, p < 0.001) and the extent of bradykinesia (r = 0.43, p = 0.004). Speech alterations correlated with a measure of exposure to mutant gene products (CAG-age-product score; r = 0.60, p < 0.001)., Conclusion: Speech abnormalities in HD are associated with other motor and cognitive deficits and are measurable already in premanifest stages of HD. Therefore, automated speech analysis might represent a quantitative HD biomarker with potential for assessing disease progression., (© 2023 The Authors. European Journal of Neurology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Academy of Neurology.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Long-Term Averaged Spectrum Descriptors of Dysarthria in Patients With Parkinson's Disease Treated With Subthalamic Nucleus Deep Brain Stimulation.
- Author
-
Svihlik J, Novotny M, Tykalova T, Polakova K, Brozova H, Kryze P, Sousa M, Krack P, Tripoliti E, Ruzicka E, Jech R, and Rusz J
- Subjects
- Humans, Dysarthria etiology, Dysarthria therapy, Speech Disorders therapy, Subthalamic Nucleus physiology, Parkinson Disease complications, Parkinson Disease therapy, Deep Brain Stimulation methods
- Abstract
Purpose: This study aimed to evaluate whether long-term averaged spectrum (LTAS) descriptors for reading and monologue are suitable to detect worsening of dysarthria in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) treated with subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation (STN-DBS) with potential effect of ON and OFF stimulation conditions and types of connected speech., Method: Four spectral moments based on LTAS were computed for monologue and reading passage collected from 23 individuals with PD treated with bilateral STN-DBS and 23 age- and gender-matched healthy controls. Speech performance of patients with PD was compared in ON and OFF STN-DBS conditions., Results: All LTAS spectral moments including mean, standard deviation, skewness, and kurtosis across both monologue and reading passage were able to significantly distinguish between patients with PD in both stimulation conditions and control speakers. The spectral mean was the only LTAS measure sensitive to capture better speech performance in STN-DBS ON, as compared to the STN-DBS OFF stimulation condition ( p < .05). Standardized reading passage was more sensitive compared to monologue in detecting dysarthria severity via LTAS descriptors with an area under the curve of up to 0.92 obtained between PD and control groups., Conclusions: Our findings confirmed that LTAS is a suitable approach to objectively describe changes in speech impairment severity due to STN-DBS therapy in patients with PD. We envisage these results as an important step toward a continuum development of technological solutions for the automated assessment of stimulation-induced dysarthria., Supplemental Material: https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.21644798.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Speech acoustic indices for differential diagnosis between Parkinson's disease, multiple system atrophy and progressive supranuclear palsy.
- Author
-
Daoudi K, Das B, Tykalova T, Klempir J, and Rusz J
- Abstract
While speech disorder represents an early and prominent clinical feature of atypical parkinsonian syndromes such as multiple system atrophy (MSA) and progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), little is known about the sensitivity of speech assessment as a potential diagnostic tool. Speech samples were acquired from 215 subjects, including 25 MSA, 20 PSP, 20 Parkinson's disease participants, and 150 healthy controls. The accurate differential diagnosis of dysarthria subtypes was based on the quantitative acoustic analysis of 26 speech dimensions related to phonation, articulation, prosody, and timing. A semi-supervised weighting-based approach was then applied to find the best feature combinations for separation between PSP and MSA. Dysarthria was perceptible in all PSP and MSA patients and consisted of a combination of hypokinetic, spastic, and ataxic components. Speech features related to respiratory dysfunction, imprecise consonants, monopitch, slow speaking rate, and subharmonics contributed to worse performance in PSP than MSA, whereas phonatory instability, timing abnormalities, and articulatory decay were more distinctive for MSA compared to PSP. The combination of distinct speech patterns via objective acoustic evaluation was able to discriminate between PSP and MSA with very high accuracy of up to 89% as well as between PSP/MSA and PD with up to 87%. Dysarthria severity in MSA/PSP was related to overall disease severity. Speech disorders reflect the differing underlying pathophysiology of tauopathy in PSP and α-synucleinopathy in MSA. Vocal assessment may provide a low-cost alternative screening method to existing subjective clinical assessment and imaging diagnostic approaches., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Articulatory undershoot of vowels in isolated REM sleep behavior disorder and early Parkinson's disease.
- Author
-
Skrabal D, Rusz J, Novotny M, Sonka K, Ruzicka E, Dusek P, and Tykalova T
- Abstract
Imprecise vowels represent a common deficit associated with hypokinetic dysarthria resulting from a reduced articulatory range of motion in Parkinson's disease (PD). It is not yet unknown whether the vowel articulation impairment is already evident in the prodromal stages of synucleinopathy. We aimed to assess whether vowel articulation abnormalities are present in isolated rapid eye movement sleep behaviour disorder (iRBD) and early-stage PD. A total of 180 male participants, including 60 iRBD, 60 de-novo PD and 60 age-matched healthy controls performed reading of a standardized passage. The first and second formant frequencies of the corner vowels /a/, /i/, and /u/ extracted from predefined words, were utilized to construct articulatory-acoustic measures of Vowel Space Area (VSA) and Vowel Articulation Index (VAI). Compared to controls, VSA was smaller in both iRBD (p = 0.01) and PD (p = 0.001) while VAI was lower only in PD (p = 0.002). iRBD subgroup with abnormal olfactory function had smaller VSA compared to iRBD subgroup with preserved olfactory function (p = 0.02). In PD patients, the extent of bradykinesia and rigidity correlated with VSA (r = -0.33, p = 0.01), while no correlation between axial gait symptoms or tremor and vowel articulation was detected. Vowel articulation impairment represents an early prodromal symptom in the disease process of synucleinopathy. Acoustic assessment of vowel articulation may provide a surrogate marker of synucleinopathy in scenarios where a single robust feature to monitor the dysarthria progression is needed., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Automated video-based assessment of facial bradykinesia in de-novo Parkinson's disease.
- Author
-
Novotny M, Tykalova T, Ruzickova H, Ruzicka E, Dusek P, and Rusz J
- Abstract
Even though hypomimia is a hallmark of Parkinson's disease (PD), objective and easily interpretable tools to capture the disruption of spontaneous and deliberate facial movements are lacking. This study aimed to develop a fully automatic video-based hypomimia assessment tool and estimate the prevalence and characteristics of hypomimia in de-novo PD patients with relation to clinical and dopamine transporter imaging markers. For this cross-sectional study, video samples of spontaneous speech were collected from 91 de-novo, drug-naïve PD participants and 75 age and sex-matched healthy controls. Twelve facial markers covering areas of forehead, nose root, eyebrows, eyes, lateral canthal areas, cheeks, mouth, and jaw were used to quantitatively describe facial dynamics. All patients were evaluated using Movement Disorder Society-Unified PD Rating Scale and Dopamine Transporter Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography. Newly developed automated facial analysis tool enabled high-accuracy discrimination between PD and controls with area under the curve of 0.87. The prevalence of hypomimia in de-novo PD cohort was 57%, mainly associated with dysfunction of mouth and jaw movements, and decreased variability in forehead and nose root wrinkles (p < 0.001). Strongest correlation was found between reduction of lower lip movements and nigro-putaminal dopaminergic loss (r = 0.32, p = 0.002) as well as limb bradykinesia/rigidity scores (r = -0.37 p < 0.001). Hypomimia represents a frequent, early marker of motor impairment in PD that can be robustly assessed via automatic video-based analysis. Our results support an association between striatal dopaminergic deficit and hypomimia in PD., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Short-term effect of dopaminergic medication on speech in early-stage Parkinson's disease.
- Author
-
Tykalova T, Novotny M, Ruzicka E, Dusek P, and Rusz J
- Abstract
The effect of dopaminergic medication on speech has rarely been examined in early-stage Parkinson's disease (PD) and the respective literature is inconclusive and limited by inappropriate design with lack of PD control group. The study aims to examine the short-term effect of dopaminergic medication on speech in PD using patients with good motor responsiveness to levodopa challenge compared to a control group of PD patients with poor motor responsiveness. A total of 60 early-stage PD patients were investigated before (OFF) and after (ON) acute levodopa challenge and compared to 30 age-matched healthy controls. PD patients were categorised into two clinical subgroups (PD responders vs. PD nonresponders) according to the comparison of their motor performance based on movement disorder society-unified Parkinson's disease rating scale, part III. Seven distinctive parameters of hypokinetic dysarthria were examined using quantitative acoustic analysis. We observed increased monopitch (p > 0.01), aggravated monoloudness (p > 0.05) and longer duration of stop consonants (p > 0.05) in PD compared to healthy controls, confirming the presence of hypokinetic dysarthria in early PD. No speech alterations from OFF to ON state were revealed in any of the two PD groups and speech dimensions investigated including monopitch, monoloudness, imprecise consonants, harsh voice, slow sequential motion rates, articulation rate, or inappropriate silences, although a subgroup of PD responders manifested obvious improvement in motor function after levodopa intake (p > 0.001). Since the short-term usage of levodopa does not easily affect voice and speech performance in PD, speech assessment may provide a medication state-independent motor biomarker of PD., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Defining Speech Subtypes in De Novo Parkinson Disease: Response to Long-term Levodopa Therapy.
- Author
-
Rusz J, Tykalova T, Novotny M, Zogala D, Sonka K, Ruzicka E, and Dusek P
- Subjects
- Dysarthria complications, Female, Humans, Speech physiology, Speech Disorders etiology, Levodopa therapeutic use, Parkinson Disease complications, Parkinson Disease diagnosis, Parkinson Disease drug therapy
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Patterns of speech disorder in Parkinson disease (PD), which are highly variable across individual patients, have not been systematically studied. Our aim was to identify speech subtypes in treatment-naive patients with PD and to examine their response to long-term dopaminergic therapy., Methods: We recorded speech data from a total of 111 participants with de novo PD; 83 of the participants completed the 12-month follow-up (69 patients with PD on stable dopaminergic medication and 14 untreated controls with PD). Unsupervised k-means cluster analysis was performed on 8 distinctive parameters of hypokinetic dysarthria examined with quantitative acoustic analysis., Results: Three distinct speech subtypes with similar prevalence, symptom duration, and motor severity were detected: prosodic, phonatory-prosodic, and articulatory-prosodic. Besides monopitch and monoloudness, which were common in each subtype, speech impairment was more severe in the phonatory-prosodic subtype with predominant dysphonia and the articulatory-prosodic subtype with predominant imprecise consonant articulation than in the prosodic subtype. Clinically, the prosodic subtype was characterized by a prevalence of women and younger age, while articulatory-prosodic subtype was characterized by the prevalence of men, older age, greater severity of axial gait symptoms, and poorer cognitive performance. The phonatory-prosodic subtype clinically represented intermediate status in age with mostly men and preserved cognitive performance. While speech of untreated controls with PD deteriorated over 1 year ( p = 0.02), long-term dopaminergic medication maintained stable speech impairment severity in the prosodic and articulatory-prosodic subtypes and improved speech performance in patients with the phonatory-prosodic subtype ( p = 0.002)., Discussion: Distinct speech phenotypes in de novo PD reflect divergent underlying mechanisms and allow prediction of response of speech impairment to levodopa therapy., Classification of Evidence: This study provides Class II evidence that, in patients with newly diagnosed PD with speech impairment, speech phenotype is associated with levodopa responsiveness., (© 2021 American Academy of Neurology.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Effect of Ageing on Acoustic Characteristics of Voice Pitch and Formants in Czech Vowels.
- Author
-
Tykalova T, Skrabal D, Boril T, Cmejla R, Volin J, and Rusz J
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Aging, Czech Republic, Female, Humans, Language, Male, Middle Aged, Phonetics, Young Adult, Acoustics, Speech Acoustics
- Abstract
Background: The relevance of formant-based measures has been noted across a spectrum of medical, technical, and linguistic applications. Therefore, the primary aim of the study was to evaluate the effect of ageing on vowel articulation, as the previous research revealed contradictory findings. The secondary aim was to provide normative acoustic data for all Czech monophthongs., Methods: The database consisted of 100 healthy speakers (50 men and 50 women) aged between 20 and 90. Acoustic characteristics, including vowel duration, vowel space area (VSA), fundamental frequency (f
o ), and the first to fourth formant frequencies (F1 -F4 ) of 10 Czech vowels were extracted from a reading passage. In addition, the articulation rate was calculated from the entire duration of the reading passage., Results: Age-related changes in pitch were sex-dependent, while age-related alterations in F2 /a/, F2 /u/, VSA, and vowel duration seemed to be sex-independent. In particular, we observed a clear lowering of fo with age for women, but no change for men. With regard to formants, we found lowering of F2 /a/ and F2 /u/ with increased age, but no statistically significant changes in F1 , F3 , or F4 frequencies with advanced age. Although the alterations in F1 and F2 frequencies were rather small, they appeared to be in a direction against vowel centralization, resulting in a significantly greater VSA in the older population. The greater VSA was found to be related partly to longer vowel duration., Conclusions: Alterations in vowel formant frequencies across several decades of adult life appear to be small or in a direction against vowel centralization, thus indicating the good preservation of articulatory precision in older speakers., (Copyright © 2020 The Voice Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Reply to: "Fostering Voice Objective Analysis in Patients With Movement Disorders".
- Author
-
Rusz J, Tykalova T, Ramig LO, and Tripoliti E
- Subjects
- Acoustics, Dysarthria, Humans, Speech, Movement Disorders, Voice, Voice Disorders
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Guidelines for Speech Recording and Acoustic Analyses in Dysarthrias of Movement Disorders.
- Author
-
Rusz J, Tykalova T, Ramig LO, and Tripoliti E
- Subjects
- Acoustics, Humans, Speech, Speech Acoustics, Speech Disorders, Dysarthria diagnosis, Parkinson Disease
- Abstract
Most patients with movement disorders have speech impairments resulting from sensorimotor abnormalities that affect phonatory, articulatory, and prosodic speech subsystems. There is widespread cross-discipline use of speech recordings for diagnostic and research purposes, despite which there are no specific guidelines for a standardized method. This review aims to combine the specific clinical presentations of patients with movement disorders, existing acoustic assessment protocols, and technological advances in capturing speech to provide a basis for future research in this field and to improve the consistency of clinical assessments. We considered 3 areas: the recording environment (room, seating, background noise), the recording process (instrumentation, vocal tasks, elicitation of speech samples), and the acoustic outcome data. Four vocal tasks, namely, sustained vowel, sequential and alternating motion rates, reading passage, and monologues, are integral aspects of motor speech assessment. Fourteen acoustic vocal speech features, including their hypothesized pathomechanisms with regard to typical occurrences in hypokinetic or hyperkinetic dysarthria, are hereby recommended for quantitative exploratory analysis. Using these acoustic features and experimental speech data, we demonstrated that the hyperkinetic dysarthria group had more affected speech dimensions compared with the healthy controls than had the hypokinetic speakers. Several contrasting speech patterns between both dysarthrias were also found. This article is the first attempt to provide initial recommendations for a standardized way of recording the voice and speech of patients with hypokinetic or hyperkinetic dysarthria; thus allowing clinicians and researchers to reliably collect, acoustically analyze, and compare vocal data across different centers and patient cohorts. © 2020 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society., (© 2020 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Comparison of Automated Acoustic Methods for Oral Diadochokinesis Assessment in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis.
- Author
-
Novotny M, Melechovsky J, Rozenstoks K, Tykalova T, Kryze P, Kanok M, Klempir J, and Rusz J
- Subjects
- Acoustics, Algorithms, Bayes Theorem, Humans, Speech, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
- Abstract
Purpose The purpose of this research note is to provide a performance comparison of available algorithms for the automated evaluation of oral diadochokinesis using speech samples from patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Method Four different algorithms based on a wide range of signal processing approaches were tested on a sequential motion rate /pa/-/ta/-/ka/ syllable repetition paradigm collected from 18 patients with ALS and 18 age- and gender-matched healthy controls (HCs). Results The best temporal detection of syllable position for a 10-ms tolerance value was achieved for ALS patients using a traditional signal processing approach based on a combination of filtering in the spectrogram, Bayesian detection, and polynomial thresholding with an accuracy rate of 74.4%, and for HCs using a deep learning approach with an accuracy rate of 87.6%. Compared to HCs, a slow diadochokinetic rate ( p < .001) and diadochokinetic irregularity ( p < .01) were detected in ALS patients. Conclusions The approaches using deep learning or multiple-step combinations of advanced signal processing methods provided a more robust solution to the estimation of oral DDK variables than did simpler approaches based on the rough segmentation of the signal envelope. The automated acoustic assessment of oral diadochokinesis shows excellent potential for monitoring bulbar disease progression in individuals with ALS.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Reader response: Motor speech patterns in Huntington disease.
- Author
-
Rusz J and Tykalova T
- Subjects
- Humans, Speech, Huntington Disease genetics
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Dysarthria enhancement mechanism under external clear speech instruction in Parkinson's disease, progressive supranuclear palsy and multiple system atrophy.
- Author
-
Skrabal D, Tykalova T, Klempir J, Ruzicka E, and Rusz J
- Subjects
- Dysarthria etiology, Humans, Speech, Multiple System Atrophy complications, Parkinson Disease complications, Supranuclear Palsy, Progressive complications
- Abstract
Clear speech refers to intentionally modifying conversational speech to maximise intelligibility. This study aimed to compare the speech behaviour of patients with progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), multiple system atrophy (MSA) and Parkinson's disease (PD) under conversational and clear speech conditions to gain greater pathophysiological insight. A total of 68 participants including 17 PD, 17 MSA, 17 PSP and 17 healthy controls (HC) performed two readings of the same standardized passage. During the first reading, participants were instructed to read the text in an ordinary way, while during the second reading to read the text as clearly as possible. Acoustic analyses were based upon measurements of mean loudness, loudness variability, pitch variability, vowel articulation, articulation rate and speech severity. During clear speech production, PD patients were able to achieve improvements mainly in loudness (p < 0.05) and pitch variability (p < 0.001), leading to a reduction in overall speech severity (p < 0.001), whereas PSP and MSA patients were able to modulate only articulation rate (p < 0.05). Contrary to HC and PD groups, which slowed or maintained articulation rate, PSP and MSA groups employed a markedly faster articulation rate under the clear speech condition indicating an opposing approach to speech adaptation. Patients with atypical Parkinsonism showed a different strategy to intentionally improve their speech performance following a simple request to produce speech more clearly compared to PD, suggesting important therapeutic implications for speech rehabilitation management.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Brain volumetric correlates of dysarthria in multiple sclerosis.
- Author
-
Rusz J, Vaneckova M, Benova B, Tykalova T, Novotny M, Ruzickova H, Uher T, Andelova M, Novotna K, Friedova L, Motyl J, Kucerova K, Krasensky J, and Horakova D
- Subjects
- Adult, Atrophy diagnostic imaging, Brain pathology, Dysarthria etiology, Female, Gray Matter diagnostic imaging, Gray Matter pathology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Multiple Sclerosis complications, Reading, Brain diagnostic imaging, Dysarthria diagnostic imaging, Multiple Sclerosis diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Although dysarthria is a common pattern in multiple sclerosis (MS), the contribution of specific brain areas to key factors of dysarthria remains unknown. Speech data were acquired from 123 MS patients with Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) ranging from 1 to 6.5 and 60 matched healthy controls. Results of computerized acoustic analyses of subtests on spastic and ataxic aspects of dysarthria were correlated with MRI-based brain volume measurements. Slow articulation rate during reading was associated with bilateral white and grey matter loss whereas reduced maximum speed during oral diadochokinesis was related to greater cerebellar involvement. Articulation rate showed similar correlation to whole brain atrophy (r = 0.46, p < 0.001) as the standard clinical scales such as EDSS (r = -0.45, p < 0.001). Our results support the critical role of the pyramidal tract and cerebellum in the modification of motor speech timing in MS., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Slowed articulation rate is associated with information processing speed decline in multiple sclerosis: A pilot study.
- Author
-
Friedova L, Rusz J, Motyl J, Srpova B, Vodehnalova K, Andelova M, Novotna K, Novotny M, Ruzickova H, Tykalova T, Kubala Havrdova E, Horakova D, and Uher T
- Subjects
- Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pilot Projects, ROC Curve, Regression Analysis, Cognition Disorders diagnosis, Cognition Disorders etiology, Dysarthria etiology, Multiple Sclerosis complications
- Abstract
Background: Impairment of cognition and speech are common in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients, but their relationship is not well understood., Objective: To describe the relationship between articulation rate characteristics and processing speed and to investigate the potential role of objective speech analysis for the detection of cognitive decline in MS., Methods: A total of 122 patients with clinically definite MS were included in this cross-sectional pilot study. Patients underwent three speaking tasks (oral diadochokinesis, reading text and monologue) and assessment of processing speed (Symbol Digit Modalities Test [SDMT], Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test-3 s [PASAT-3]). Association between articulation rate and cognition was analyzed using linear regression analysis. We estimated the area under the receiver operating characteristics curves (AUC) to evaluate the predictive accuracy of articulation rate measures for the detection of abnormal processing speed., Results: We observed an association between articulation rate and cognitive measures (rho = 0.45-0.58; p < 0.001). Faster reading speed by one word per second was associated with an 18.7 point (95% confidence interval [CI] 14.9-22.5) increase of the SDMT score and 14.7 (95% CI 8.9-20.4) point increase of PASAT-3 score (both p < 0.001). AUC values of articulation rate characteristics for the identification of processing speed impairment ranged between 0.67 and 0.79. Using a cutoff of 3.10 in reading speed, we were able to identify impairment in both the SDMT and PASAT-3 with 91% sensitivity and 54% specificity., Conclusion: Slowed articulation rate is strongly associated with processing speed decline. Objective quantitative speech analysis identified patients with abnormal cognitive performance., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Smartphone Allows Capture of Speech Abnormalities Associated With High Risk of Developing Parkinson's Disease.
- Author
-
Rusz J, Hlavnicka J, Tykalova T, Novotny M, Dusek P, Sonka K, and Ruzicka E
- Subjects
- Aged, Dysarthria physiopathology, Female, Healthy Volunteers, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Speech Recognition Software, Parkinson Disease complications, Parkinson Disease diagnosis, Smartphone, Speech Disorders diagnosis, Speech Disorders etiology
- Abstract
Although smartphone technology provides new opportunities for the recording of speech samples in everyday life, its ability to capture prodromal speech impairment in persons with a high risk of developing Parkinson's disease (PD) has never been investigated. Speech data were acquired through a smartphone as well as a professional microphone with a linear frequency response from 50 participants with a rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder that are at a high risk of developing PD and related neurodegenerative disorders. Additionally, recordings of 30 newly diagnosed, untreated PD patients and 30 healthy participants were evaluated. Acoustic assessment of 11 speech dimensions representing the key aspects of hypokinetic dysarthria in the early stages of PD was performed. Smartphone allowed the detection of speech abnormalities in participants with a high risk of developing PD. Acoustic measurements related to fundamental frequency variability, duration of pause intervals, and rate of speech timing extracted from spontaneous speech were sufficiently sensitive to significantly separate groups (area under curve of 0.85 between PD and controls) and showed very strong correlation and reliability between the professional microphone and the smartphone. Speech-based biomarkers collected through smartphones may have the potential to revolutionize the diagnostic process in neurodegenerative diseases and improve stratification for future neuroprotective therapy in PD.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Characteristics of motor speech phenotypes in multiple sclerosis.
- Author
-
Rusz J, Benova B, Ruzickova H, Novotny M, Tykalova T, Hlavnicka J, Uher T, Vaneckova M, Andelova M, Novotna K, Kadrnozkova L, and Horakova D
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Ataxia etiology, Dysarthria etiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Motor Disorders etiology, Multiple Sclerosis classification, Multiple Sclerosis complications, Muscle Spasticity etiology, Phenotype, Severity of Illness Index, Young Adult, Ataxia physiopathology, Dysarthria physiopathology, Motor Disorders physiopathology, Multiple Sclerosis physiopathology, Muscle Spasticity physiopathology
- Abstract
Background: Motor speech disorders in multiple sclerosis (MS) are poorly understood and their quantitative, objective acoustic characterization remains limited. Additionally, little data regarding relationships between the severity of speech disorders and neurological involvement in MS, as well as the contribution of pyramidal and cerebellar functional systems on speech phenotypes, is available., Methods: Speech data were acquired from 141 MS patients with Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) ranging from 1 to 6.5 and 70 matched healthy controls. Objective acoustic speech assessment including subtests on phonation, oral diadochokinesis, articulation and prosody was performed., Results: The prevalence of dysarthria in our MS cohort was 56% while the severity was generally mild and primarily consisted of a combination of spastic and ataxic components. Prosodic-articulatory disorder presenting with monopitch, articulatory decay, excess loudness variations and slow rate was the most salient. Speech disorders reflected subclinical motor impairment with 78% accuracy in discriminating between a subgroup of asymptomatic MS (EDSS < 2.0) and control speakers. Speech disorder severity was related to the severity of neurological involvement. Decreased articulation rate was moderately correlated to EDSS as well as all subtests of the multiple sclerosis functional composite. The strongest correlation was observed between irregular oral diadochokinesis and the 9-Hole Peg Test (r = - 0.65, p < 0.001). Irregular oral diadochokinesis and excess loudness variations significantly separated pure pyramidal and mixed pyramidal-cerebellar MS subgroups., Conclusions: Automated speech analyses may provide valuable biomarkers of disease progression in MS as dysarthria represents common and early manifestation that reflects disease disability and underlying pyramidal-cerebellar pathophysiology., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. High-accuracy voice-based classification between patients with Parkinson's disease and other neurological diseases may be an easy task with inappropriate experimental design.
- Author
-
Rusz J, Novotny M, Hlavnicka J, Tykalova T, and Ruzicka E
- Abstract
Recently, based on voice cepstral analysis, Benba et al. (IEEE T. Neur. Sys. Reh., vol. 24, pp. 1100-1108, 2016) have reported discrimination between patients with Parkinson's disease and different neurological disorders with high classification accuracy up to 90%. Using the same approach, we were able to experimentally separate two groups of normal healthy speakers with 96% classification accuracy and showed that the method proposed by Benba et al. may not be appropriate for discrimination between different neurological diseases. In particular, voice cepstral analysis appears to be sensitive to specific speakers' characteristics such as gender or age. Our findings emphasize several assumptions that can be considered as basic necessary conditions for research reporting speech data in progressive neurodegenerative diseases.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Distinct patterns of imprecise consonant articulation among Parkinson's disease, progressive supranuclear palsy and multiple system atrophy.
- Author
-
Tykalova T, Rusz J, Klempir J, Cmejla R, and Ruzicka E
- Subjects
- Aged, Cerebellum physiopathology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Voice, Dysarthria physiopathology, Linguistics, Multiple System Atrophy physiopathology, Parkinson Disease physiopathology, Speech, Supranuclear Palsy, Progressive physiopathology
- Abstract
Distinct speech characteristics that may aid in differentiation between Parkinson's disease (PD), progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) and multiple system atrophy (MSA) remain tremendously under-explored. Here, the patterns and degree of consonant articulation deficits across voiced and voiceless stop plosives in 16 PD, 16 PSP, 16 MSA and 16 healthy control speakers were evaluated using acoustic and perceptual methods. Imprecise consonant articulation was observed across all Parkinsonian groups. Voice onset time of voiceless plosives was more prolonged in both PSP and MSA compared to PD, presumably due to greater severity of dysarthria and slower articulation rate. Voice onset time of voiced plosives was significantly shorter only in MSA, likely as a consequence of damage to cerebellar structures. In agreement with the reduction of pre-voicing, MSA manifested increased number of voiced plosives misclassified as voiceless at perceptual evaluation. Timing of articulatory movements may provide important clues about the pathophysiology of underlying disease., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Speech changes after coordinative training in patients with cerebellar ataxia: a pilot study.
- Author
-
Tykalova T, Pospisilova M, Cmejla R, Jerabek J, Mares P, and Rusz J
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Cerebellar Ataxia complications, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pilot Projects, Speech Disorders etiology, Speech Production Measurement, Treatment Outcome, Cerebellar Ataxia rehabilitation, Physical Therapy Modalities, Speech Disorders rehabilitation
- Abstract
Although rehabilitative training is a necessary adjunct in the management of gait ataxia, it remains unknown whether the possible beneficial effect of intensive coordinative training may translate to activities of daily living, which are closely connected with postural alignment. The aim of the present study was to examine the effectiveness of a 2-week intensive coordinative motor training on speech production. Speech and motor performances in a cohort of ten individuals with cerebellar degeneration were examined three times; before the introduction of training, directly and 4 weeks after the last training session. Each patient was instructed to perform a speaking task of fast syllable repetition and monologue. Objective acoustic analyses were used to investigate six key aspects of speech production disturbed in ataxic dysarthria including accuracy of consonant articulation, accuracy of vowel articulation, irregular alternating motion rates, prolonged phonemes, slow alternating motion rates and inappropriate segmentation. We found that coordinative training had a mild beneficial effect on speech in cerebellar patients. Immediately after the last training session, slight speech improvements were evident in all ten patients. Furthermore, follow-up assessment performed 4 weeks later revealed that 90 % of the patients showed better speech performance than before initiation of the therapy. The present study supports evidence that the intensive rehabilitative training may positively affect fine-motor movements such as speech in patients with cerebellar ataxia.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Acoustic investigation of stress patterns in Parkinson's disease.
- Author
-
Tykalova T, Rusz J, Cmejla R, Ruzickova H, and Ruzicka E
- Subjects
- Acoustics, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Case-Control Studies, Cues, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Parkinson Disease diagnosis, Parkinson Disease physiopathology, Parkinson Disease psychology, Pattern Recognition, Automated, Sound Spectrography, Speech Disorders physiopathology, Speech Disorders psychology, Speech Perception, Time Factors, Parkinson Disease complications, Speech Acoustics, Speech Disorders diagnosis, Speech Disorders etiology, Speech Production Measurement, Voice Quality
- Abstract
Objectives: Although reduced stress is thought to be one of the most deviant speech dimensions in hypokinetic dysarthria associated with Parkinson's disease (PD), the mechanisms of stress production in PD have not been thoroughly explored by objective methods. The aim of the present study was to quantify the effect of PD on prosodic characteristics and to describe contrastive stress patterns in parkinsonian speech., Methods: The ability of 20 male speakers with early PD and 16 age- and gender-matched healthy controls (HCs) to signal contrastive stress was investigated. Each participant was instructed to unnaturally emphasize five key words while reading a short block of text. Acoustic analyses were based on the measurement of pitch, intensity, and duration. In addition, an innovative measurement termed the stress pattern index (SPI) was designed to mirror the effect of all distinct acoustic cues exploited during stress production., Results: Although PD patients demonstrated a reduced ability to convey contrastive stress, they could still notably increase pitch, intensity, and duration to emphasize a word within a sentence. No differences were revealed between PD and HC stress productions using the measurements of pitch, intensity, duration, and intensity range. However, restricted SPI and pitch range were evident in the PD group., Conclusions: A reduced ability to express stress seems to be the distinctive pattern of hypokinetic dysarthria, even in the early stages of PD. Because PD patients were able to consciously improve their speech performance using multiple acoustic cues, the introduction of speech therapy may be rewarding., (Copyright © 2014 The Voice Foundation. Published by Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Imprecise vowel articulation as a potential early marker of Parkinson's disease: effect of speaking task.
- Author
-
Rusz J, Cmejla R, Tykalova T, Ruzickova H, Klempir J, Majerova V, Picmausova J, Roth J, and Ruzicka E
- Subjects
- Acoustics, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Articulation Disorders diagnosis, Articulation Disorders physiopathology, Case-Control Studies, Early Diagnosis, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Parkinson Disease diagnosis, Parkinson Disease physiopathology, Predictive Value of Tests, Sound Spectrography, Speech Perception, Speech Production Measurement, Time Factors, Articulation Disorders etiology, Parkinson Disease complications, Phonation, Phonetics, Speech Acoustics, Speech Intelligibility, Voice Quality
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to analyze vowel articulation across various speaking tasks in a group of 20 early Parkinson's disease (PD) individuals prior to pharmacotherapy. Vowels were extracted from sustained phonation, sentence repetition, reading passage, and monologue. Acoustic analysis was based upon measures of the first (F1) and second (F2) formant of the vowels /a/, /i/, and /u/, vowel space area (VSA), F2i/F2u and vowel articulation index (VAI). Parkinsonian speakers manifested abnormalities in vowel articulation across F2u, VSA, F2i/F2u, and VAI in all speaking tasks except sustained phonation, compared to 15 age-matched healthy control participants. Findings suggest that sustained phonation is an inappropriate task to investigate vowel articulation in early PD. In contrast, monologue was the most sensitive in differentiating between controls and PD patients, with classification accuracy up to 80%. Measurements of vowel articulation were able to capture even minor abnormalities in speech of PD patients with no perceptible dysarthria. In conclusion, impaired vowel articulation may be considered as a possible early marker of PD. A certain type of speaking task can exert significant influence on vowel articulation. Specifically, complex tasks such as monologue are more likely to elicit articulatory deficits in parkinsonian speech, compared to other speaking tasks.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.