• Non ci sono risultati.

VOICE PATTERNS IN SCHIZOPHRENIA: A CROSS-LINGUISTIC REPLICATION OF PREVIOUS META-ANALYTIC FINDINGS

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2021

Condividi "VOICE PATTERNS IN SCHIZOPHRENIA: A CROSS-LINGUISTIC REPLICATION OF PREVIOUS META-ANALYTIC FINDINGS"

Copied!
2
0
0

Testo completo

(1)

Title: Voice patterns in schizophrenia: a cross-linguistic replication of previous meta-analytic

findings

Parola Albertoa, Simonsen Arndisb,c, Bliksted Vibekeb,c,Zhou Yuan e, Ubukata Shiho f,Kölkebeck Katja g, Pedersen

Heine Lund h, Fusaroli Riccardoc,d

a Center for Cognitive Science, University of Turin, Italy b

Psychosis Research Unit - Department of Clinical Medicine, AU, Denmark

c The Interacting Minds Center - Institute of Culture and Society, AU, Denmark

d Department of Linguistics, Semiotics and Cognitive Science, AU, Denmark e

Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing

f Department of Psychiatry, Kyoto University

g Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Albert-Schweitzer-Campus, Münster h Department of Clinical Medicine, Aarhus University Hospital,

BACKGROUND

Schizophrenia (SCZ) has been associated to distinctive voice since its first definitions. Distinctive voice patterns are often associated with core negative symptoms and with social impairment. They may thus represent markers of the disorder.

A recent meta-analysis identified weak atypicalities for pitch variability, and stronger atypicalities in duration (speech percentage, pause duration and speech rate). However, heterogeneity across studies was large, most of the studies underpowered (small sample and no repeated measures) and replications across studies almost nonexistent. In addition, there is a lack of cross-linguistic studies comparing voice and linguistic patterns in SCZ across different languages to assess whether the patterns are distinctive of SCZ in general, or specific to linguistic and/or cultural groups.

In the present study, we aim to advance the understanding of voice patterns in SCZ by collecting and analyzing a cross-linguistic corpus of repeated voice measures. Such corpus enables us to systematically assess the replicability of previous meta-analytic results, better accounting for between and within participant variability, as well as cross-linguistic differences.

Methods

We collected a Danish (DK), Chinese (CH) and Japanese (JP) cross-linguistic dataset involving 163 participants with SCZ (105 DK, 51 CH, 7 JP) and 173 matched controls (HC) (117 DK, 43 CH, 13 JP) for a total of 3851 audio-recordings. Data were collected using the Animated Triangle Task.

Voice recordings were preprocessed using consolidated algorithms (Covarep, Praat) to extract the following features, in order to compare results with the effect sizes (ES) of previous meta-analysis (MA): 1) Duration measures (speech rate, duration of utterance, number of pauses, pause duration), as well as 2) pitch and

intensity (mean and variability).

To investigate differences between SCZ and HC, we ran multilevel regression models with the acoustic feature as outcome, diagnosis (SZ, HC) and language (DK, JP, CH) as predictors, and varying effects by participant and corpus. Predictors were scaled in order to allow comparison with meta-analysis ES.

(2)

Results

We were only able to partially replicate previous findings. The meta-analysis found: 1) lower pitch

variability, replicated for JP only (β= -1.25, SE = 0.37, p < .001); 2) lower speech rate replicated for DK only

(β= -0.23, SE = .08, p < .01); 3) increased pause duration replicated for DK (β= 0.29, SE = .08, p < .001) and JP (β= 0.59, SE = .30 , p < .05); 4) lack of evidence for atypical number of pauses replicated for DK, JP and CH; 5) lack of evidence for atypical duration of utterance replicated for CH and JP (DK presented higher duration: β= 0.01, SE = 0.01 , p < .01); 6) lower proportion of spoken time, not replicated; 7) lack of evidence for pitch mean, replicated for DK, but higher in CH (β= 0.37, SE = .18, p < .05), and lower in JP (β= -1.46, SE = .41, p < .001).

Discussion

We found only partial replication of previous meta-analytic findings for reduced pitch variability, increased

pause duration and lower speech rate, with ES generally smaller than in previous meta-analysis. On the

contrary, we were not able to replicate previous findings of lower proportion of spoken time.

Estimations of ES were largely affected by different languages, and replications held only for specific languages (pitch variability for JP, speech rate for DK, and pause duration for DK and JP). This indicates the important role that linguistic factors may play in originating vocal patterns in SCZ. Voice patterns seem not to be distinctive of SCZ in general, but bounded to linguistic/cultural differences. Future studies should better investigate how different acoustic and linguistic features interact in originating atypical voice patterns in SCZ.

Riferimenti

Documenti correlati

However, hyperaccumulator species exhibit a positive response in terms of root surface area, biomass and photosynthetic efficiency, compared to non-

Vediamo così citato Demone e il sacrificio di prigionieri e anziani in onore di Kronos in Sardegna; Timeo e l’uccisione dei padri anziani da parte degli

Gli obiettivi della gestione e del trattamento delle bronchiectasie sono la riduzione della frequenza delle riacutizzazioni e la conservazione della funzione polmonare con

The use of nursing staff is dependent on various activities provided at each ICU such as the number and type of diagnosis, severity of patients’ illness and the

Questo breve testo divulgativo analizza le specificità della realtà valdese odierna a partire dall'identità (ossia chi sono i valdesi e in che cosa consiste la loro religione),

A Mantova Greil Marcus, il critico musicale che firma il libro dell'anno su 'Bob Dylan scritti 1968-2010' (Odoya) con prefazione di Riccardo Bertoncelli e un contributo di

Lo scopo di questo elaborato è stato quello di creare un modello numerico che studiasse il comportamento statico di un solaio latero-cementizio tipo “SAP” consolidato con una

Tuttavia, non emergono differenze significative per quanto concerne i test psicometrici più prettamente legati alla sfera affettiva (SAS, ansia di stato; BDI,