Abstract

Speech Sound Disorders (SSDs) is a generic term used to describe a range of difficulties producing speech sounds in children (McLeod and Baker, 2017). The foundations of clinical assessment, classification and intervention for children with SSD have been heavily influenced by psycholinguistic theory and procedures, which largely posit a firm boundary between phonological processes and phonetics/articulation (Shriberg, 2010). Thus, in many current SSD classification systems the complex relationships between the etiology (distal), processing deficits (proximal) and the behavioral levels (speech symptoms) is under-specified (Terband et al., 2019a). It is critical to understand the complex interactions between these levels as they have implications for differential diagnosis and treatment planning (Terband et al., 2019a). There have been some theoretical attempts made towards understanding these interactions (e.g., McAllister Byun and Tessier, 2016) and characterizing speech patterns in children either solely as the product of speech motor performance limitations or purely as a consequence of phonological/grammatical competence has been challenged (Inkelas and Rose, 2007; McAllister Byun, 2012). In the present paper, we intend to reconcile the phonetic-phonology dichotomy and discuss the interconnectedness between these levels and the nature of SSDs using an alternative perspective based on the notion of an articulatory “gesture” within the broader concepts of the Articulatory Phonology model (AP; Browman and Goldstein, 1992). The articulatory “gesture” serves as a unit of phonological contrast and characterization of the resulting articulatory movements (Browman and Goldstein, 1992; van Lieshout and Goldstein, 2008). We present evidence supporting the notion of articulatory gestures at the level of speech production and as reflected in control processes in the brain and discuss how an articulatory “gesture”-based approach can account for articulatory behaviors in typical and disordered speech production (van Lieshout, 2004; Pouplier and van Lieshout, 2016). Specifically, we discuss how the AP model can provide an explanatory framework for understanding SSDs in children. Although other theories may be able to provide alternate explanations for some of the issues we will discuss, the AP framework in our view generates a unique scope that covers linguistic (phonology) and motor processes in a unified manner.

Highlights

  • In clinical speech-language pathology (S-LP), the distinction between articulation and phonology and whether a speech sound error1 arises from motor-based articulation issues or language/grammar based phonological issues has been debated for decades

  • We chose to focus on the Articulatory Phonology model (AP) framework, as it directly addresses issues related to phonology and articulation using Dynamical Systems Theory (DST) principles related to relative stable patterns of behaviors, that emerge when multiple components underlying these behaviors interact through time in a given context as shown in the time varying nature of the relationship between coupled structures that express those behaviors (Saltzman and Munhall, 1989; Browman and Goldstein, 1992)

  • With technologies like real time Magnetic Resonance Imaging finding its way into the analysis of typical and disordered speech and relatively low cost automatic video-based facetracking systems (Bandini et al, 2017) starting to emerge for clinical purposes, we hope that speech-language pathologists will have the tools they need to support their assessment and intervention planning based on a better understanding and quantification of the dynamics of speech gestures and articulatory synergies

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Summary

Frontiers in psychology

Aravind Kumar Namasivayam1,2*, Deirdre Coleman, Aisling O’Dwyer and Pascal van Lieshout. We intend to reconcile the phonetic-phonology dichotomy and discuss the interconnectedness between these levels and the nature of SSDs using an alternative perspective based on the notion of an articulatory “gesture” within the broader concepts of the Articulatory Phonology model (AP; Browman and Goldstein, 1992). The articulatory “gesture” serves as a unit of phonological contrast and characterization of the resulting articulatory movements (Browman and Goldstein, 1992; van Lieshout and Goldstein, 2008). We present evidence supporting the notion of articulatory gestures at the level of speech production and as reflected in control processes in the brain and discuss how an articulatory “gesture”-based approach can account for articulatory behaviors in typical and disordered speech production (van Lieshout, 2004; Pouplier and van Lieshout, 2016).

INTRODUCTION
ARTICULATORY PHONOLOGY
Speech Motor Synergies
Development of Speech Motor Synergies
Describing Casual Speech Alternations
Speech Delay
Cluster reduction
Tract variable Gestural planning oscillators
Vowel Addition and Final Consonant Deletion
Articulation Impairment
Developmental Dysarthria
CONCLUSION
Findings
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
Full Text
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