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Título
Discriminating speech traits of Alzheimer's disease assessed through a corpus of reading task for Spanish language
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Discriminación
Alzheimer, Enfermedad de
Análisis conductual
Lectura
Clasificación UNESCO
6114 Psicología Social
6310.03 Enfermedad
Fecha de publicación
2022
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
Ivanova, O., Meilán, J. J. G., Martínez-Sánchez, F., Martínez-Nicolás, I., Llorente, T. E., & González, N. C. (2022). Discriminating speech traits of Alzheimer's disease assessed through a corpus of reading task for Spanish language. Computer Speech & Language, 73, 101341.
Resumen
[EN] It is estimated that between 50% and 75% of all cases of dementia are due to Alzheimer’s disease
(AD), the most common neurodegenerative disease among World population. However, a long preclinical period of AD makes it difficult to differentiate between people with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) that would progress to dementia from people with MCI that would not. One of the most
promising solutions to detect MCI which will evolve to dementia (preAD) comes from the field of
automatic speech analysis. Speech is a complex physiological and neurocognitive language-mediated
process, which can be significantly altered in pathological aging and exhibit high levels of sensitivity
for the diagnosis of neurological diseases. The purpose of this research is to offer a detailed perspective
on the speech changes in MCI and mild AD when compared to healthy aging (HA), that would allow
to detect pathological processes prior to the clinical expression of AD. Based on our previous research
record on speech in HA, MCI and AD, we provide a global review of dementia-related speech traits
and propose a reading-based protocol for assessing ongoing neurodegenerative processes in the
elderly. We report the results of speech analysis in elderly people with different cognitive profiles, who
performed a standardized reading task and were further analyzed for correlations between neurocognitive assessment indicative of cognitive impairment stage (HA, MCI or AD) and acoustic, temporal
and prosodic traits in speech. We show that evolution from HA to AD exhibits a steady pattern of
speech changes in parallel to the cognitive decline, which consists in significant increase in duration
and phonation time, extension of pauses and voice breaks, intensification of variation in syllabic
production, and decrease in speech energy and intensity leading to dysphony. In doing so, we prove
that a standardized reading task is a very useful type of stimuli for detecting dementia-related speech
traits and, in view of this, we discuss the relevance of reading for preclinical automated diagnosis of
AD. The main contribution of this paper is a corpus of recordings of the standardized reading task
performed by healthy elderly people and people with MCI and AD in Spanish language, and which can
be used for further research purposes. In this respect, our work fills an important gap existing in
corpora-based studies of speech and language impairments related to progression to dementia.
URI
ISSN
0885-2308
DOI
10.1016/j.csl.2021.101341
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Patrocinador
Publicación en abierto financiada por la Universidad de Salamanca como participante en el Acuerdo Transformativo CRUE-CSIC con Elsevier, 2021-2024













