Abstract

Purpose This study examined the relationship between measurements derived from spontaneous speech and participants' scores on the Montreal Cognitive Assessment. Method Participants (N = 521) aged between 64 and 97 years completed the cognitive assessment and were prompted to describe an early childhood memory. A range of acoustic and linguistic measures was extracted from the resulting speech sample. A least absolute shrinkage and selection operator approach was used to model the relationship between acoustic, lexical, and demographic information and participants' scores on the cognitive assessment. Results Using the covariance test statistic, four important variables were identified, which, together, explained 16.52% of the variance in participants' cognitive scores. Conclusions The degree to which cognition can be accurately predicted through spontaneously produced speech samples is limited. Statistically significant relationships were found between specific measurements of lexical variation, participants' speaking rate, and their scores on the Montreal Cognitive Assessment.

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