Traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) cause immediate and temporary alterations in brain function that result in a variety of symptoms including impacts on speech. Symptoms of dysarthria and aphasia occur but are primarily reported in moderate-severe injuries. Less is known about the specific changes in acoustic parameters and language that occur in mild concussions. A total of 250 athletes at Seton Hall University participated in baseline speech testing. Speech testing was performed again in a subset of 15 athletes who sustained a mild concussion (within 72 h). Speech and language analysis was performed on samples derived from a picture description task. Statistical comparisons showed minimal changes in acoustic parameters on average, but individual differences were present. Specifically, some individuals presented with a flatter prosody and/or lower mean pitch than others post-injury compared to baseline. Although no clear pattern of acoustic changes emerged, language analysis (semantics, syntax, morphology) showed an overall reduction of complexity of productions. Language outcomes indicate that changes in speech symptoms occur even in mild cases. Further investigations should examine the speech and language changes after a head injury against the individual’s complete symptom profile and neurological regions of damage in a larger sample size.
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October 2021
Meeting abstract. No PDF available.
October 01 2021
Individual differences in speech and language within 72 h after a concussion Free
Jisook Ahn;
Jisook Ahn
Dept. of Speech-Lang. Pathol., Seton Hall Univ., Nutley, NJ
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Anthony J. Testa;
Anthony J. Testa
Sports Medicine, Seton Hall Univ., South Orange, NJ
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Sarah Ackermann;
Sarah Ackermann
none, Zurich, Switzerland
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Ava Silverman;
Ava Silverman
Dept. of Speech-Lang. Pathol., Seton Hall Univ., Nutley, NJ
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Mercedes Cunningham;
Mercedes Cunningham
Sports Medicine, Seton Hall Univ., South Orange, NJ
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Sona Patel
Sona Patel
Dept. of Speech-Lang. Pathol., Seton Hall Univ., 123 Metro Blvd Interprofessional Health Sci. Campus, Nutley, NJ 07110, [email protected]
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Caryn Grabowski
Jisook Ahn
Anthony J. Testa
Sarah Ackermann
Emily Hernandez
Austin Terlecky
Matthew Grunstein
Ava Silverman
Gabe Scher
Deja Craig
Kaitlin Kelly
Mercedes Cunningham
Sona Patel
Dept. of Speech-Lang. Pathol., Seton Hall Univ., Nutley, NJ
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 150, A272–A273 (2021)
Connected Content
A companion article has been published:
Acoustic and language changes within 72 hours after a concussion: Early evidence
Citation
Caryn Grabowski, Jisook Ahn, Anthony J. Testa, Sarah Ackermann, Emily Hernandez, Austin Terlecky, Matthew Grunstein, Ava Silverman, Gabe Scher, Deja Craig, Kaitlin Kelly, Mercedes Cunningham, Sona Patel; Individual differences in speech and language within 72 h after a concussion. J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 1 October 2021; 150 (4_Supplement): A272–A273. https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0008265
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