Study – Speech Patterns Could Be Good Marker For Cognitive Decline in Combat Sports Athletes

In the latest brain health safety study research was recently published in The Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation noting that various speech patterns could be used as an “effective” tool for screening combat sports athletes who are likely struggling with cognitive decline due to repeated brain trauma.

In the study, titled Articulation Rate, Pauses, and Disfluencies in Professional Fighters: Potential Speech Biomarkers for Repetitive Head Injury, the authors reviewed 60 boxers and 40 MMA athletes against 55 controls. Their articulation rate, number and duration of pauses and other issues were measured as they spoke. The authors found objective differences in the fighters speech versus the control group with boxers demonstrating more marked departure from the control group than the MMA athletes.

The authors concluded that there was value in looking for these speech pattern deficits as effective tools screening for cognitive decline noting “These speech characteristics can be measured in everyday speaking conditions and by automatic recognition systems, so they have the potential to serve as effective, noninvasive clinical indicators for RHI-associated neurological decline

The full abstract reads as follows:

Objective: 

As part of a larger study dedicated to identifying speech and language biomarkers of neurological decline associated with repetitive head injury (RHI) in professional boxers and mixed martial artists (MMAs), we examined articulation rate, pausing, and disfluency in passages read aloud by participants in the Professional Athletes Brain Health Study.

Setting: 

A large outpatient medical center specializing in neurological care.

Participants, Design, and Main Measures: 

Passages read aloud by 60 boxers, 40 MMAs, and 55 controls were acoustically analyzed to determine articulation rate (the number of syllables produced per second), number and duration of pauses, and number and duration of disfluencies in this observational study.

Results: 

Both boxers and MMAs differed from controls in articulation rate, producing syllables at a slower rate than controls by nearly half a syllable per second on average. Boxers produced significantly more pauses and disfluencies in passages read aloud than MMAs and controls.

Conclusions: 

Slower articulation rate in both boxers and MMA fighters compared with individuals with no history of RHI and the increased occurrence of pauses and disfluencies in the speech of boxers suggest changes in speech motor behavior that may relate to RHI. These speech characteristics can be measured in everyday speaking conditions and by automatic recognition systems, so they have the potential to serve as effective, noninvasive clinical indicators for RHI-associated neurological decline.


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