Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05286658

Behavioral and Neural Responses to External Alterations of Speech Variability

Behavioral and Neural Measures of Speech Motor Control

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
17 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Wisconsin, Madison · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The purpose of this research study is to understand how the brain processes and controls speech in healthy people. The investigators are doing this research because it will help identify the mechanisms that allow people to perceive their own speech errors and to learn new speech sounds, which may be applied to people who have communication disorders. 15 participants will be enrolled into this part of the study and can expect to be on study for 3-4 visits of 2-4 hours each.

Detailed description

The overall study (Establishing the clinical utility of sensorimotor adaptation for speech rehabilitation) aims to understand how cognitive, perceptual, and motor processes are integrated in the control of speech movements. The investigators study how this complex skill is performed in healthy speakers to understand how this system functions, how this skill relates to the perception of speech, and what role different parts of the brain play in this process. Different studies look at how speech motor control is executed, maintained, and changed. Overall, the study will recruit 329 participants over the course of 5 years. Participants can expect to be on study for up to 3 weeks. The entire study is composed of 8 experiments and 6 interventions. The present record represents the experiments involving magnetoencephalographic (MEG) imaging, i.e. Experiment 5: Behavioral and neural responses to external alterations of speech variability. This paradigm modulates the perceived speech variability of participants through three different altered auditory feedback sessions: an inward-pushing feedback perturbation that decreases perceived variability by playing back participants' speech closer to the center of their vowel distributions, an outward-pushing feedback perturbation that increases perceived variability by playing back participants' speech farther from the center of their vowel distributions, and a normal feedback condition in which speech feedback is played back without perturbation. Participants will complete this paradigm during MEG imaging, which will noninvasively measure auditory cortical activity evoked during speech production and playback.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALMEG/EEGThe participant will sit still while their head is slid into the helmet-shaped bottom of the MEG device. The MEG contains sensors that passively detect weak magnetic fields outside the head produced by brain activity. The computer records the brain's electrical activity on the screen as wavy lines. The investigators will also ask you to wear sensors to capture eye-blinks (electrooculogram) and heartbeats (electrocardiogram) to facilitate removal from the MEG signal during analysis. Participant will sit in front of a projector screen and be asked to put on a pair of headphones. Participant will be shown real words or nonsense words to read, the investigators may play sounds through headphones for the participant to repeat. Participant speech will be recorded by a microphone. The investigators may ask the participant to identify what they heard by pressing a button on a button-box. These tasks are expected to take about one hour to complete.
BEHAVIORALMRIAn MRI is a test that uses a magnetic field and pulses of radio wave energy to make pictures of organs and structures inside the body. The participant will be able to hear and speak to the research staff at all times during the MRI procedures. The MRI test will take about 15 minutes.
BEHAVIORALSpeaking TasksThe participant may be asked to perform some of the tasks from MEG again, this time outside of the scanner. As before, the participant may see real words or nonsense words to read, and the investigators may play sounds through headphones and ask the participant to repeat them. Participant speech will be recorded by a microphone. The investigators may ask the participant to identify what they heard by pressing a button on a button-box. These tasks are expected to take about one hour to complete.

Timeline

Start date
2021-10-19
Primary completion
2022-07-19
Completion
2022-07-19
First posted
2022-03-18
Last updated
2024-02-13
Results posted
2024-02-13

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05286658. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.