Join LSVT BIG and LSVT LOUD Faculty as they discuss frequently asked questions related to LSVT treatment protocols.
Continue Reading →Join LSVT Global faculty for an informational webinar on Life after LSVT LOUD® and LSVT BIG®.
Continue Reading →Join LSVT BIG and LSVT LOUD Faculty as they discuss frequently asked questions related to LSVT treatment protocols.
Continue Reading →Join LSVT Global faculty for an informational webinar on the top 10 questions related to LSVT treatments.
Continue Reading →I have seen improvements in my patients’ movement overall, but specifically, my most recent patient had a reduction in his freezing episodes while turning, and he has more confidence to do his daily activities.
Continue Reading →Join LSVT BIG and LSVT LOUD Faculty as they discuss unique challenges faced by individuals with atypical or advanced Parkinsonian disorders. The presentation will include information on how LSVT BIG can improve mobility for these individuals and how treatment can be adapted to fit the unique needs often encountered in these populations.
Continue Reading →Join our LSVT LOUD faculty to learn more about LSVT LOUD (in Japanese).
Continue Reading →Join our LSVT LOUD faculty to learn more about LSVT LOUD (in Japanese).
Continue Reading →Disordered speech and voice may limit access to everyday voice activated devices (e.g., mobile phones, computers). These devices have automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems that have been trained on non-disordered speech. This makes it frustrating for individuals with speech disorders such as those accompanying Amyotropic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Down Syndrome and Parkinson’s disease (PD) to utilize these devices. Project Euphonia is an initiative by Google to make speech technology more accessible to individuals with non-standard speech. The first step in this process is to gather large numbers of speech samples from disordered speakers in order to train speech recognition systems. This paper reports initial work to collect speech data from individuals with PD to contribute to this project.
Continue Reading →Given the role of voice in language expression, we pose that optimizing vocal function may lead to improved language production. Verbs are often impaired in individuals with PD and it is thought that damage to the motor system, given its connection action verbs, underlies this lexical effect. If this is the case, then treatment improving vocal motor function may also improve access to action verbs. Following an intensive 4-week voice treatment, individuals with PD produced fewer utterances and had decreased mean utterance length, but they also produced more words, morphemes and verbs per utterance. Thus, intervention improving vocal loudness was associated with improved verb use and production of more complex syntax in PD.
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