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Many Changes in Speech through Aging Are Actually a Consequence of Cognitive Changes

Israel Martínez‐Nicolás, Thide E. Llorente, Olga Ivanova, Francisco Martínez‐Sánchez, Juan José García Meilán

2022International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: During aging, changes in human speech may arise because of the neurophysiological deterioration associated with age, or as the result of an impairment in the cognitive processes underlying speech production. Some speech parameters show specific alterations under the presence of dementia. The objective of our study is to identify which of these parameters change because of age, cognitive state, or the interaction of both. METHODS: The sample includes 400 people over 55 years old, who were divided into four groups, according to their age. The cognitive state of the participants was assessed through the MMSE test and three ranks were stablished. Gender was also considered in the analysis. RESULTS: Certain temporal, fluency, rhythm, amplitude and voice quality parameters were found to be related to the cognitive state, while disturbance parameters changed due to age. Frequency parameters were exclusively influenced by gender. CONCLUSIONS: Understanding how speech parameters are specifically affected by age, cognitive state, or the interaction of both, is determinant to advance in the use of speech as a clinical marker for the detection of cognitive impairments.

Topics & Concepts

CognitionPsychologyVerbal fluency testDementiaAudiologyCognitive declineCognitive testRhythmCognitive psychologyDevelopmental psychologyMedicineNeuropsychologyDiseaseNeuroscienceInternal medicinePathologyNeurobiology of Language and BilingualismStuttering Research and TreatmentVoice and Speech Disorders
Many Changes in Speech through Aging Are Actually a Consequence of Cognitive Changes | Litcius