Acoustic and perceptual analysis of the sibilant sound /s/ before and after orthognathic surgery

Typeset version

 

TY  - JOUR
  - Lee, A. S. Y., Whitehill, T. L., Ciocca, V., ; Samman, N.
  - 2002
  - January
  - Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
  - Acoustic and perceptual analysis of the sibilant sound /s/ before and after orthognathic surgery
  - Published
  - ()
  - Orthognathic surgery Cantonese acoustic analysis
  - 60
  - 4
  - 364
  - 372
  - Purpose: Orthognathic surgery may have a positive or negative effect on speech. Perceptual evaluation of presurgical and postsurgical articulation is difficult because speech errors, when they occur, are usually fricative distortions, which may be difficult to document reliably. In this study, acoustic analysis was used to supplement perceptual judgment of presurgical and postsurgical productions of /s/. Subjects and Methods: The study population consisted of 9 Cantonese speakers undergoing osteotomy for Class III skeletal deformity and 9 age- and gender-matched adults with normal occlusion and speech. The speech sample consisted of 6 words with the initial sibilant sound /s/. Perceptual analysis included narrow phonetic transcription and classification of error types. Acoustic analysis included measurement of first and second spectral peaks, fricative duration, noise bandwidth, and noise-to-vowel decibel ratio. Results: The results of the perceptual analysis showed a decrease in articulatory errors for the group after surgery, although 5 patients had no perceptual errors before surgery. Acoustic analysis showed significant differences between the experimental and control groups before surgery for 2 variables (spectral peak I and bandwidth). Three months after surgery there were no significant differences between the control group and the experimental group, except for bandwidth. Twelve months after surgery, there were significant differences between the 2 groups in noise bandwidth and spectral peak II. Conclusions: The results suggest a possible relapse at 1 year after surgery, based on spectral peak values. Osteotomy appears to result in a positive change in articulation for most patients, but speech outcome after osteotomy must be evaluated both 1 year and shortly after surgery.
  - https://doi.org/10.1053/joms.2002.31221
DA  - 2002/01
ER  - 
@article{V13251902,
   = {Lee, A. S. Y., Whitehill, T. L., Ciocca, V.,  and  Samman, N.},
   = {2002},
   = {January},
   = {Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery},
   = {Acoustic and perceptual analysis of the sibilant sound /s/ before and after orthognathic surgery},
   = {Published},
   = {()},
   = {Orthognathic surgery Cantonese acoustic analysis},
   = {60},
   = {4},
  pages = {364--372},
   = {{Purpose: Orthognathic surgery may have a positive or negative effect on speech. Perceptual evaluation of presurgical and postsurgical articulation is difficult because speech errors, when they occur, are usually fricative distortions, which may be difficult to document reliably. In this study, acoustic analysis was used to supplement perceptual judgment of presurgical and postsurgical productions of /s/. Subjects and Methods: The study population consisted of 9 Cantonese speakers undergoing osteotomy for Class III skeletal deformity and 9 age- and gender-matched adults with normal occlusion and speech. The speech sample consisted of 6 words with the initial sibilant sound /s/. Perceptual analysis included narrow phonetic transcription and classification of error types. Acoustic analysis included measurement of first and second spectral peaks, fricative duration, noise bandwidth, and noise-to-vowel decibel ratio. Results: The results of the perceptual analysis showed a decrease in articulatory errors for the group after surgery, although 5 patients had no perceptual errors before surgery. Acoustic analysis showed significant differences between the experimental and control groups before surgery for 2 variables (spectral peak I and bandwidth). Three months after surgery there were no significant differences between the control group and the experimental group, except for bandwidth. Twelve months after surgery, there were significant differences between the 2 groups in noise bandwidth and spectral peak II. Conclusions: The results suggest a possible relapse at 1 year after surgery, based on spectral peak values. Osteotomy appears to result in a positive change in articulation for most patients, but speech outcome after osteotomy must be evaluated both 1 year and shortly after surgery.}},
   = {https://doi.org/10.1053/joms.2002.31221},
  source = {IRIS}
}
AUTHORSLee, A. S. Y., Whitehill, T. L., Ciocca, V., ; Samman, N.
YEAR2002
MONTHJanuary
JOURNAL_CODEJournal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
TITLEAcoustic and perceptual analysis of the sibilant sound /s/ before and after orthognathic surgery
STATUSPublished
TIMES_CITED()
SEARCH_KEYWORDOrthognathic surgery Cantonese acoustic analysis
VOLUME60
ISSUE4
START_PAGE364
END_PAGE372
ABSTRACTPurpose: Orthognathic surgery may have a positive or negative effect on speech. Perceptual evaluation of presurgical and postsurgical articulation is difficult because speech errors, when they occur, are usually fricative distortions, which may be difficult to document reliably. In this study, acoustic analysis was used to supplement perceptual judgment of presurgical and postsurgical productions of /s/. Subjects and Methods: The study population consisted of 9 Cantonese speakers undergoing osteotomy for Class III skeletal deformity and 9 age- and gender-matched adults with normal occlusion and speech. The speech sample consisted of 6 words with the initial sibilant sound /s/. Perceptual analysis included narrow phonetic transcription and classification of error types. Acoustic analysis included measurement of first and second spectral peaks, fricative duration, noise bandwidth, and noise-to-vowel decibel ratio. Results: The results of the perceptual analysis showed a decrease in articulatory errors for the group after surgery, although 5 patients had no perceptual errors before surgery. Acoustic analysis showed significant differences between the experimental and control groups before surgery for 2 variables (spectral peak I and bandwidth). Three months after surgery there were no significant differences between the control group and the experimental group, except for bandwidth. Twelve months after surgery, there were significant differences between the 2 groups in noise bandwidth and spectral peak II. Conclusions: The results suggest a possible relapse at 1 year after surgery, based on spectral peak values. Osteotomy appears to result in a positive change in articulation for most patients, but speech outcome after osteotomy must be evaluated both 1 year and shortly after surgery.
PUBLISHER_LOCATION
ISBN_ISSN
EDITION
URL
DOI_LINKhttps://doi.org/10.1053/joms.2002.31221
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