Abstract

ObjectiveThe aim of the study is to investigate the use of incidences and characteristics of Prevocalic Electroglottographic Signal (PVES) derived from electroglottography (EGG) in characterizing glottal stops in cleft palate speech. MethodsMandarin non-aspirated monosyllabic first tone words were used for the speech sampling procedure. A total of 1680 utterances (from 83 patients with repaired cleft palates) were divided into three categories based on the results of auditory-perceptual evaluation of recorded speech sounds by three independent reviewers: [Category A (absence of glottal stop agreed by all 3 reviewers) (n = 1192 tokens), Category B (two out of three reviewers agreed on the presence of a glottal stop) (n = 181 tokens) and Category C (all 3 reviewers agreed on the presence of a glottal stop) (n = 307 tokens)]. The EGG signals of the 1680 utterances were analyzed using a MATLAB program to automatically mark the instances of PVES (amplitude & time-interval) in the GS utterances. ResultsThe result showed that the incidence of EGG PVES presented good positive correlation with auditory-perceptual evaluation (r=0.703, p<0.000). Statistical analysis revealed a significant difference in mean PVES amplitude among different groups (p<0.05). There was a significant distinction in the time-interval between groups A and B, as well as in groups A and C (p<0.05). ConclusionsThe study suggests PVES can be an objective means of identifying glottal stops in cleft palate speech. It also indicates that proportion of amplitude and time interval of PVES tend to be positively correlate with subjective assessment.

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