Abstract

This study examined intraproduction variability in jitter measures from elderly speakers' sustained vowel productions and tried to determine whether mean jitter levels (percent) and intraspeaker variability on jitter measures are affected significantly by the segment of the vowel selected for measurement. Twenty-eight healthy elderly men (mean age 75.6 years) and women (mean age 72.0 years) were tape recorded producing 25 repeat trials of the vowels /i/, /a/, and /u/, as steadily as possible. Jitter was analyzed from two segments of each vowel production: (a) the initial 100 cycles after 1 s of phonation, and (b) 100 cycles from the most stable-appearing portion of the production. Results indicated that the measurement point selected for jitter analysis was a significant factor both in the mean jitter level obtained and in the variability of jitter observed across repeat productions. This study examined intraproduction variability in jitter measures from elderly speakers' sustained vowel productions and tried to determine whether mean jitter levels (percent) and intraspeaker variability on jitter measures are affected significantly by the segment of the vowel selected for measurement. Twenty-eight healthy elderly men (mean age 75.6 years) and women (mean age 72.0 years) were tape recorded producing 25 repeat trials of the vowels /i/, /a/, and /u/, as steadily as possible. Jitter was analyzed from two segments of each vowel production: (a) the initial 100 cycles after 1 s of phonation, and (b) 100 cycles from the most stable-appearing portion of the production. Results indicated that the measurement point selected for jitter analysis was a significant factor both in the mean jitter level obtained and in the variability of jitter observed across repeat productions.

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