Abstract

To describe the performance of fluent adults in different measures of speech rate. The study included 24 fluent adults, of both genders, speakers of Brazilian Portuguese, who were born and still living in the metropolitan region of Belo Horizonte, state of Minas Gerais, aged between 18 and 59 years. Participants were grouped by age: G1 (18-29 years), G2 (30-39 years), G3 (40-49 years), and G4 (50-59 years). The speech samples were obtained following the methodology of the Speech Fluency Assessment Protocol. In addition to the measures of speech rate proposed by the protocol (speech rate in words and syllables per minute), the rate of speech into phonemes per second and the articulation rate with and without the disfluencies were calculated. We used the nonparametric Friedman test and the Wilcoxon test for multiple comparisons. Groups were compared using the nonparametric Kruskal Wallis. The significance level was of 5%. There were significant differences between measures of speech rate involving syllables. The multiple comparisons showed that all the three measures were different. There was no effect of age for the studied measures. These findings corroborate previous studies. The inclusion of temporal acoustic measures such as speech rate in phonemes per second and articulation rates with and without disfluencies can be a complementary approach in the evaluation of speech rate.

Highlights

  • Speech rate is an important measure of fluency of speech, being inversely proportional to the severity of stuttering[1,2,3]

  • The objective of this study is to describe the performance of fluent adults in different speech rate measures

  • This study was approved by the Research Ethics Committee of Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (CAAE: 01460612.4.0000.5149)

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Summary

Introduction

Speech rate is an important measure of fluency of speech, being inversely proportional to the severity of stuttering[1,2,3]. It is important to characterize the speech rate both in stutterers and in fluent individuals. Fluency can be defined as the continuous and smooth flow of speech production[2] and is commonly analyzed according to the following parameters: type of breaks (typical disfluencies and stuttering), frequency of breaks (speech discontinuity percentage and percentage of stuttering), and speech rate in words and syllables per minute[1,2,4]. We found different proposals for the analysis of speech rate in the literature, both with regard to the measurement unit (words per minute, syllables per minute, or phonemes per minute)(1,2) and the exclusion or not of speech disruptions[5], which can often lead the clinician to difficulty in choosing a methodology

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