Aphasia is used to describe the total loss of language and speech from a brain injury. Dysphasia refers to the partial loss of language. But the term “aphasia” is usually used to refer to both conditions. Aphasia vs. dysarthria Unlike aphasia that happens because of a brain injury,dysarthri...
Aphasia does not include (1) developmental disorders of language, often called dysphasia in the United States; (2) purely motor speech disorders, limited to articulation of speech via the oral-motor apparatus, referred to as stuttering, dysarthria, and apraxia of speech; or (3) disorders of ...
Speech recognition for people with dysphasia using convolutional neural network. In Proceedings of the 2018 IEEE International Conference on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics (SMC), Miyazaki, Japan, 7–10 October 2018; pp. 2164–2169. [Google Scholar] Moore, M.; Venkateswara, H.; Panchanathan, S...
Optimising Speaker-Dependent Feature Extraction Parameters to Improve Automatic Speech Recognition Performance for People with Dysarthria. Sensors 2021, 21, 6460. [CrossRef] 43. Hosom, J.P.; Jakobs, T.; Baker, A.; Fager, S. Automatic speech recognition for assistive writing in speech ...