Abstract

We examined if and how pauses during connected speech reflect cognitive processes underlying language formulation in typical aging and Parkinson’s disease (PD), beyond respiratory and motor-speech mechanisms. The frequency of silent pauses was measured (a) in relation to different linguistic (independent clausal, subordinate clausal, phrasal, and atypical) boundaries and (b) proficiency measures of language production in young adults, older adults, and individuals with PD. At the group level, aging, but not PD, resulted in increased pausing at atypical linguistic locations. However, in both aging and PD, individuals’ reduced production of syntactically complex sentences was associated with more frequent pausing at various typical prosodic (clausal or phrasal) boundaries. Frequency of pauses was not associated with individual performance in grammaticality of sentences and lexical-semantic production. Overall, the present study demonstrated that production of pauses during connected speech reflects cognitive processes underlying language production beyond respiratory-physiological processes of communication. Assessing production of pauses in connected speech may augment, but does not replace, assessment of language production in clinical practice.

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