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Reliability and validity of speech & pause measures during passage reading in ALS

  • Carolina Barnett
  • , Jordan R. Green
  • , Reeman Marzouqah
  • , Kaila L. Stipancic
  • , James D. Berry
  • , Lawrence Korngut
  • , Angela Genge
  • , Christen Shoesmith
  • , Hannah Briemberg
  • , Agessandro Abrahao
  • , Sanjay Kalra
  • , Lorne Zinman
  • , Yana Yunusova

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

47 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: The use of speech measures is becoming a common practice in the assessment of bulbar disease progression in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). This study aimed to establish psychometric properties (e.g. reliability, validity, sensitivity, specificity) of speech and pause timing measures during a standardized passage. Methods: A large number of passage recordings (ALS N = 775; Neurotypical controls N = 323) was analyzed using a semi-automatic method (Speech and Pause Analysis, SPA). Results: The results revealed acceptable reliability of the speech and pause measures across repeated recording by the control participants. Strong construct validity was established via significant group differences between patients and controls and correlation statistics with clinical measures of overall ALS and bulbar disease severity. Speaking rate, pause events, and mean pause duration were able to detect ALS participants at the presymptomatic stage of bulbar disease with a good discrimination ability (AUC 0.81). Conclusions: Based on the current psychometric evaluation, performing passage recording and speech and pause timing analysis was deemed useful for detecting early and progressive changes associated with bulbar ALS.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)42-50
Number of pages9
JournalAmyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and Frontotemporal Degeneration
Volume21
Issue number1-2
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2 2020

Keywords

  • Bulbar ALS
  • passage reading
  • pauses
  • reliability
  • speaking rate
  • validity

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