An automatic measure for speech intelligibility in dysarthrias—validation across multiple languages and neurological disorders

J. Tröger, Felix Dörr, Louisa Schwed, N. Linz, Alexandra König, Tabea Thies, J. Orozco-Arroyave, J. Rusz
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Abstract

Dysarthria, a motor speech disorder caused by muscle weakness or paralysis, severely impacts speech intelligibility and quality of life. The condition is prevalent in motor speech disorders such as Parkinson's disease (PD), atypical parkinsonism such as progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), Huntington's disease (HD), and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Improving intelligibility is not only an outcome that matters to patients but can also play a critical role as an endpoint in clinical research and drug development. This study validates a digital measure for speech intelligibility, the ki: SB-M intelligibility score, across various motor speech disorders and languages following the Digital Medicine Society (DiMe) V3 framework.The study used four datasets: healthy controls (HCs) and patients with PD, HD, PSP, and ALS from Czech, Colombian, and German populations. Participants’ speech intelligibility was assessed using the ki: SB-M intelligibility score, which is derived from automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems. Verification with inter-ASR reliability and temporal consistency, analytical validation with correlations to gold standard clinical dysarthria scores in each disease, and clinical validation with group comparisons between HCs and patients were performed.Verification showed good to excellent inter-rater reliability between ASR systems and fair to good consistency. Analytical validation revealed significant correlations between the SB-M intelligibility score and established clinical measures for speech impairments across all patient groups and languages. Clinical validation demonstrated significant differences in intelligibility scores between pathological groups and healthy controls, indicating the measure's discriminative capability.The ki: SB-M intelligibility score is a reliable, valid, and clinically relevant tool for assessing speech intelligibility in motor speech disorders. It holds promise for improving clinical trials through automated, objective, and scalable assessments. Future studies should explore its utility in monitoring disease progression and therapeutic efficacy as well as add data from further dysarthrias to the validation.
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语言障碍患者语音清晰度的自动测量方法--在多种语言和神经系统疾病中进行验证
构音障碍是一种由肌肉无力或瘫痪引起的运动性语言障碍,严重影响语言清晰度和生活质量。构音障碍在帕金森病(PD)、非典型帕金森病(如进行性核上性麻痹(PSP))、亨廷顿氏病(HD)和肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)等运动性语言障碍中十分常见。提高语言可懂度不仅是患者关心的结果,也是临床研究和药物开发中的关键终点。本研究验证了语言清晰度的数字测量方法--ki:该研究使用了四个数据集:健康对照组(HCs)和来自捷克、哥伦比亚和德国人群的帕金森病(PD)、高密度脂蛋白血症(HD)、帕金森病(PSP)和肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)患者。研究使用了四个数据集:健康对照组(HCs)和来自捷克、哥伦比亚和德国人群的帕金森病(PD)、高血压(HD)、帕金森病(PSP)和渐冻人症(ALS)患者:SB-M语言清晰度评分进行评估,该评分来自自动语音识别(ASR)系统。根据自动语音识别系统之间的可靠性和时间一致性进行了验证,根据与每种疾病的金标准临床构音障碍评分的相关性进行了分析验证,并根据 HCs 和患者之间的分组比较进行了临床验证。分析验证显示,在所有患者群体和语言中,SB-M 可懂度评分与已确定的语言障碍临床测量之间存在明显的相关性。临床验证表明,病理组和健康对照组之间的可懂度得分存在明显差异,这表明该测量方法具有鉴别能力:ki: SB-M 智能评分是评估运动性言语障碍患者言语智能的可靠、有效和临床相关的工具。通过自动化、客观和可扩展的评估,它有望改善临床试验。未来的研究应探索其在监测疾病进展和疗效方面的实用性,并在验证中加入更多发音障碍的数据。
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