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      Interspeaker Variation in Habitual Speaking Rate : Evidence for a Neuromuscular Component

      1 , 2
      Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
      American Speech Language Hearing Association

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          Abstract

          Neuromuscular and sociolinguistic hypotheses were proposed to explore and account for the nature of individuals' idiosyncratic speech rates. One hundred subjects (50 males and 50 females) read the Farm Script passage at both habitual and maximum rates. FAST and SLOW subgroups of subjects were selected for both genders based on their overall speaking rates. The articulation rate data derived from 30 selected subjects (SLOW and FAST) revealed the following findings: (a) a significant linear regression function existed between the habitual and maximum rates, (b) significantly different maximum rates were found for the SLOW and the FAST groups, (c) roughly equivalent relative changes from habitual to maximum rate for both SLOW and FAST groups. No significant gender differences were found across different speech tasks and measures of speech rates. The weight of the evidence seems to suggest that neuromuscular constraints play a role in the determination of an individual's habitual speaking rate. Nevertheless, the study did not suggest that either neuromuscular hypotheses or sociolinguistic hypotheses alone can account for the control of individuals' speaking rates due to the unusual ability demonstrated by a few subjects in the SLOW group, to speak at very fast maximum rates.

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          Communication efficiency of dysarthric speakers as measured by sentence intelligibility and speaking rate.

          In an effort to quantify communication efficiency, speaking rates and intelligibility scores were obtained from a normal speaking adult and 13 dysarthric speakers representing a wide range of severity. Speakers were audio recorded as they read words and sentences. A panel of judges transcribed all recordings and subjectively ranked a randomly selected sample from each speaker according to "communication efficiency." The following measures were obtained for each speaker: word and sentence intelligibility, speaking rate, rates of intelligible and unintelligible speech and a numerical ranking of communication efficiency. Results indicated that speaking rate and speech intelligibility are not closely correlated. By plotting measures that incorporate intelligibility and rate, one can rank speakers similarly to subjective rankings of communication efficiency, and distinguish mildly dysarthric from normal speakers. The addition of intelligibility and rate measures to supplement other assessment procedures in the evaluation of dysarthric speakers is discussed.
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            Segmental durations in connected‐speech signals: Current results

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              Segmental durations in connected speech signals: preliminary results.

              The data base, methods for a study of the durations of phonetic units in connected speech, and some preliminary results are described. From readings of two scripts by many talkers, two sets of seven talkers each were selected, based on total reading time, to form a fast group and a slow group of talkers. Using computer graphics and digital playback procedures, the recordings were segmented into breath groups and pauses, and the first four sentences in each script were segmented into phones. The hold and release (that is, plosion and/or frication) portions of stops were identified and measured; less than 50% of the stops included releases. To establish the usefulness of the data base, the first-order statistics of the phonetic segments were determined, and a variety of durational characteristics were compared to existing reports. Analysis of number of breath groups, phonation time, and pause characterized the difference between so-called average fast and average slow talkers; however, no script-independent measure of these variables was found which would accurately predict the classification of individual talkers. The mean durations of various phonetic categories showed essentially the same percentage change when the fast and slow talkers were compared. Preliminary analyses of contextual influences on durations showed some expected changes, and also indicated that certain traditional predictions may not hold for informal connected speech. Gamma functions were fitted to the distributions of durations of various gross categories.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
                J Speech Lang Hear Res
                American Speech Language Hearing Association
                1092-4388
                1558-9102
                August 1997
                August 1997
                : 40
                : 4
                : 858-866
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Special Education/Communication Disorders, University of Nebraska at Kearney, Kearney, NE 68849-4590.
                [2 ]University of Wisconsin-Madison
                Article
                10.1044/jslhr.4004.858
                9263949
                77454209-bf87-4be7-86fa-942d4b0b3d1d
                © 1997
                History

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