Perceptual Training to Improve Listeners' Ability to Understand Speech Produced by Individuals With Dysarthria

Sponsor
Utah State University (Other)
Overall Status
Recruiting
CT.gov ID
NCT04897711
Collaborator
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD) (NIH)
400
2
1
14.2
200
14.1

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

There exist very few effective treatments that ease the intelligibility burden of dysarthria. Perceptual training offers a promising avenue for improving intelligibility of dysarthric speech by offsetting the communicative burden from the speaker with dysarthria on to their primary communication partners-family, friends, and caregivers. This project, utilizing advanced explanatory models, will permit identification of speaker and listener parameters, and their interactions, that allow perceptual training paradigms to be optimized for intelligibility outcomes in dysarthria rehabilitation. This work addresses this critical gap in clinical practice and sets the stage for extension of dysarthria management to listener-targeted remediation-advancing clinical practice and enhanced communication and quality of life outcomes for this population.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Behavioral: Perceptual Training
N/A

Detailed Description

There exist very few effective treatments that ease the intelligibility burden of dysarthria, and all of these require cognitive and physical effort on the part of the speaker to achieve and maintain gains. Therefore, individuals with intelligibility deficits whose cognitive and physical impairments limit their ability to modify their speech are currently not viable treatment candidates. This constitutes a significant health disparity that disproportionately affects those clinical populations with developmental, cognitive, and/or significant neuromuscular impairment.

To address this critical gap in current dysarthria management, the weight of behavioral change is shifted from the speaker to the listener. While a novel concept for dysarthria management, the idea is firmly rooted in the field of psycholinguistics and supported by a programmatic body of research showing that listener-targeted perceptual training paradigms (wherein listeners are familiarized with the degraded speech signal and provided with an orthographic transcription of what the speaker is saying) result in statistically and clinically significant intelligibility gains in dysarthria. Further, preliminary evidence suggests that these intelligibility outcomes may be influenced by hypothesis-driven speaker parameters, such as acoustic predictability of speech rhythm cues, and listener parameters, such as expertise in rhythm perception.

A requisite next step to bringing listener-targeted perceptual training closer to clinical implementation, and the overarching goal of this clinical trial, is the systematic and rigorous analysis of the speaker and listener parameters, and their interactions, that modulate, and in some cases optimize, perceptual training benefits of intelligibility improvement. To achieve this aim, an existing database of dysarthric speech (20 speakers with dysarthria) and a large cohort of listeners (n = 400) across two well-established testing sites, Utah State University and Florida State University are utilized. Thus, the key deliverable resulting from this work will be explanatory models that account for the unique and joint contributions of speaker and listener parameters on the magnitude of intelligibility improvement following perceptual training with dysarthric speech.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Anticipated Enrollment :
400 participants
Allocation:
N/A
Intervention Model:
Single Group Assignment
Intervention Model Description:
400 listeners will be recruited and enrolled. Each participant will be randomly assigned to receive perceptual training with one of 20 speakers with dysarthria, such that 20 listeners will be assigned to each speaker with dysarthria. All listener participants will receive the perceptual training intervention.400 listeners will be recruited and enrolled. Each participant will be randomly assigned to receive perceptual training with one of 20 speakers with dysarthria, such that 20 listeners will be assigned to each speaker with dysarthria. All listener participants will receive the perceptual training intervention.
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Primary Purpose:
Treatment
Official Title:
Perceptual Training for Improved Intelligibility of Dysarthric Speech
Actual Study Start Date :
Apr 26, 2021
Anticipated Primary Completion Date :
Jul 1, 2022
Anticipated Study Completion Date :
Jul 1, 2022

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Experimental: Perceptual training with a speaker with dysarthria

To examine the effect of perceptual training with speakers with dysarthria, we use a standard three-phase perceptual training protocol involving pretest, training, and posttest phases, in which speech samples from a single speaker with dysarthria are utilized for all three phases.

Behavioral: Perceptual Training
Each listener is familiarized/trained with a single speaker with dysarthria. Pretest/posttest transcription data will be used to build explanatory models of intelligibility improvement.
Other Names:
  • Familiarization
  • Outcome Measures

    Primary Outcome Measures

    1. Transcription accuracy [Transcription accuracy is assessed at pretest, immediately before perceptual training.]

      A percentage words correct (PWC) score is tabulated for each listener at pretest

    2. Transcription accuracy [Transcription accuracy is assessed at posttest, immediately after perceptual training.]

      A percentage words correct (PWC) score is tabulated for each listener at posttest

    Eligibility Criteria

    Criteria

    Ages Eligible for Study:
    18 Years to 80 Years
    Sexes Eligible for Study:
    All
    Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
    Yes
    Inclusion Criteria:

    *Native speakers of American English

    Exclusion Criteria:
    • No self-reported history of speech impairment

    • No self-reported history of language impairment

    • No self-reported history of cognitive impairment

    Contacts and Locations

    Locations

    Site City State Country Postal Code
    1 Florida State University Tallahassee Florida United States 32301
    2 Utah State University Logan Utah United States 84322

    Sponsors and Collaborators

    • Utah State University
    • National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)

    Investigators

    • Principal Investigator: Stephanie A Borrie, PhD, Utah State University
    • Principal Investigator: Kaitlin L Lansford, PhD, Florida State University

    Study Documents (Full-Text)

    None provided.

    More Information

    Publications

    Responsible Party:
    Utah State University
    ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
    NCT04897711
    Other Study ID Numbers:
    • 11110
    • R21DC018867
    First Posted:
    May 21, 2021
    Last Update Posted:
    Apr 22, 2022
    Last Verified:
    Apr 1, 2022
    Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
    Yes
    Plan to Share IPD:
    Yes
    Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
    No
    Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
    No
    Keywords provided by Utah State University
    Additional relevant MeSH terms:

    Study Results

    No Results Posted as of Apr 22, 2022