Abstract

Aphasia affects at least one third of stroke survivors, and there is increasing awareness that more fundamental deficits in auditory processing might contribute to impaired language performance in such individuals. We performed a comprehensive battery of psychoacoustic tasks assessing the perception of tone pairs and sequences across the domains of pitch, rhythm and timbre in 17 individuals with post-stroke aphasia and 17 controls. At the level of individual differences we demonstrated a correlation between metrical pattern (beat) perception and speech output fluency with strong effect (Spearman’s rho = 0.72). This dissociated from more basic auditory timing perception, which did not correlate with output fluency. This was also specific in terms of the language and cognitive measures, amongst which phonological, semantic and executive function did not correlate with beat detection. We interpret the data in terms of a requirement for the analysis of the metrical structure of sound to construct fluent output, with both being a function of higher-order “temporal scaffolding”. The beat perception task herein allows measurement of timing analysis without any need to account for motor output deficit, and could be a potential clinical tool to examine this. This work suggests strategies to improve fluency after stroke by training in metrical pattern perception.

Highlights

  • In order to investigate central auditory processing deficits in PSA, and whether auditory input processing of tone sequences relates to speech output fluency, we have performed an extensive battery of tests assessing the processing of pitch and melody, rhythm and metre, and timbre in individuals with chronic aphasia following left hemisphere stroke and controls

  • The present study looked for associations between four tests of auditory sequence processing, as well as three psychoacoustic tests using tone pairs or sounds, and behavioural measures of speech output fluency

  • We found a strong association between speech output fluency (PC3) and one of the sequence processing tasks, namely rhythm metrical pattern discrimination (R3) (Table 4)

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Summary

Objectives

Our aims were: (a) to characterise the profile of auditory processing deficits in chronic PSA; and (b) to test the hypothesis that speech output fluency would correlate with the ability to process sequences of tones, but not with the ability to process simpler tone pairs

Methods
Results
Conclusion

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