Aphasia classification: The relationship between objective measures of spontaneous speaking samples and naive listener judgments of similarity and fluency.

Hird, Kathryn and Silvestri, Joanne and Dunn, John and Kirsner, Kim (2005) Aphasia classification: The relationship between objective measures of spontaneous speaking samples and naive listener judgments of similarity and fluency. [Clinical Aphasiology Paper]

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Abstract

Kirsner, Dunn, Hird, Parkin and Clark (2002) described the lognormal pause and speech segment distributions which chracterize spontaneous speech. This project investiagted the ecological validity of a pause distribution approach to classification of aphasia. The relationship between acoustic measures derived from 8 aphasic speech samples and 22 naive listener's similarity judgments using multidimensional scaling analysis and direct magnitude estimates of fluency was undertaken. Listener's descriptions of the speech samples were subject to lexical semantic analysis and semantic concept analysis. The results indicated a relationship between the temporal characteristics and listener's perception of similarity and fluency.

Item Type: Clinical Aphasiology Paper
Additional Information: USED WITH PERMISSION.
Depositing User: Rebecca Rothman
Date Deposited: 05 May 2005
Last Modified: 31 Oct 2016 15:13
Conference: Clinical Aphasiology Conference > Clinical Aphasiology Conference (2005 : 35th : Sanibel Island, FL : May 31-June 4, 2005)
URI: http://aphasiology.pitt.edu/id/eprint/1564

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