Session Information
Date: Tuesday, June 6, 2017
Session Title: Pathophysiology (Other Movement Disorders)
Session Time: 1:45pm-3:15pm
Location: Exhibit Hall C
Objective: Congenital aglossia is a rare syndrome of born without a tongue. This paper examines articulatory movements of a congenital aglossic speaker to understand physiology by which a person, born without a tongue and with no surgical, medical or therapeutic assistance can produce intelligible speech
Background: Aperson with isolated congenital aglossia (PWCA) with intelligible speech was examined using real-time Magnetic Resonance Imaging (rtMRI) to determine vocal-tract shapes during speech production and compare with a person without congenital aglossia (PwoCA).
The PwCA was a 45-year-old female presenting with micrognathia and microsomia with a severe Class II malocclusion. She is the 11th case reported in the literature since 1718.
Methods: Speech stimuli was multiple phoneme combinations, words, phrases and sentences read by PwCA. Data acquired using rtMRI protocol developed specifically for dynamic study of upper airway movements . Previously recorded data from PwoCA, were used for comparison purposes.
Results: Partial results;
Aglossic speaker forms lip closure for producing /t/, /d/ in VCV sequence, dissimilar to normal
-Articulatory difference between /t/ and /p/ was constriction for /t/ extended significantly more towards posterior end of vocal-tract making back cavity shorter compared to /p/
-It is known that for transient and frication sources during release of plosive, transfer function is dominated by cavity anterior to constriction
-Similarity in anterior cavities for aglossic speaker’s /t/ and /p/ may explain similarity of the F2 loci at release
Conclusions:
-An important difference between aglossic speaker’s /t/ and /p/ is closure loci and duration
-Articulatory-acoustic modeling studies of plosive consonants have focused primarily at release
therefore one plausible explanation of our findings is that loci at closure are associated to size of back cavity, and loci at release are associated to front cavity, however supporting such a hypothesis would need more data and models.
Results are highly applicable to rehabilitation of oral motor/structural disorders to assist in compensatory speech placements
References: Toutios, A., & Narayanan, S. (2016). Advances in real-time magnetic resonance imaging of the vocal tract for speech science and technology research. APSIPA Transactions on Signal and Information Processing, 5, e6.
Vaz, C., Ramanarayanan, V., & Narayanan, S. (2013). A two-step technique for MRI audio enhancement using dictionary learning and wavelet packet analysis. In INTERSPEECH-2013, 1312-1315.
To cite this abstract in AMA style:
B. McMicken. Case study: Real-time MRI articulatory comparison of a congenital aglossic and normal speaker [abstract]. Mov Disord. 2017; 32 (suppl 2). https://www.mdsabstracts.org/abstract/case-study-real-time-mri-articulatory-comparison-of-a-congenital-aglossic-and-normal-speaker/. Accessed November 22, 2024.« Back to 2017 International Congress
MDS Abstracts - https://www.mdsabstracts.org/abstract/case-study-real-time-mri-articulatory-comparison-of-a-congenital-aglossic-and-normal-speaker/