American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology Vol.21 258-263 August 2012. doi:10.1044/1058-0360(2012/11-0007)
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Research Note

Tone Discrimination as a Window Into Acoustic Perceptual Deficits in Parkinson's Disease

Joshua Trochea
Michelle S. Trochea
Rebecca Berkowitzb
Murray Grossmanc
Jamie Reillya

a University of Florida, Gainesville
b Temple University, Philadelphia, PA
c University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia

Correspondence to Joshua Troche: jetgator{at}ufl.edu

Purpose: Deficits in auditory perception compromise a range of linguistic processes in persons with Parkinson's disease (PD), including speech perception and sensitivity to affective and linguistic prosody. An unanswered question is whether this deficit exists not only at the level of speech perception, but also at a more pervasive level of auditory perception. It is possible that PD produces a selective impairment in the perception of a salient acoustic feature such as frequency, amplitude, or duration.

Method: Auditory perception in persons with PD was investigated using a tone discrimination task where clients ( N = 12) and age-matched controls ( N = 15) made same/different judgments for pairs of pure tones that were factorially varied by acoustic feature (i.e., frequency, amplitude, or duration) crossed with perceptual distance (i.e., close vs. far).

Results: Relative to healthy age-matched controls, persons with PD showed marked impairment in tone discrimination. Persons with PD showed an acoustic feature by perceptual distance interaction that was characterized by deficits in detecting frequency and amplitude differences for perceptually near tones.

Conclusion: These results suggest that persons with PD show a reduced ability to notice change in frequency and amplitude as compared to normal older adults. More generally, these findings implicate a frontal–striatal contribution to auditory perception.

Key Words: Parkinson's disease, speech perception, auditory perception, tone detection, frontal lobe


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