Logotipo del repositorio
  • English
  • Español
  • Euskara
  • Iniciar sesión
    ¿Nuevo usuario? Regístrese aquí¿Ha olvidado su contraseña?
Logotipo del repositorio
  • DeustoTeka
  • Comunidades
  • Todo DSpace
  • Políticas
  • English
  • Español
  • Euskara
  • Iniciar sesión
    ¿Nuevo usuario? Regístrese aquí¿Ha olvidado su contraseña?
  1. Inicio
  2. Buscar por autor

Examinando por Autor "Lundin, Nancy B."

Mostrando 1 - 1 de 1
Resultados por página
Opciones de ordenación
  • No hay miniatura disponible
    Ítem
    Automated measures of speech content and speech organization in schizophrenia: test-retest reliability and generalizability across demographic variables
    (Elsevier Ireland Ltd, 2023-02) Minor, Kyle S.; Lundin, Nancy B.; Myers, Evan J.; Fernández Villardón, Aitana ; Lysaker, Paul H.
    Technological advances in artificial intelligence and natural language processing have increased efficiency of assessing speech content and speech organization in schizophrenia. Despite these developments, there has been little focus on the psychometrics of these approaches. Using two common assessments, the current study addressed this gap by: 1) measuring test-retest reliability; and 2) assessing whether speech content and/or speech organization generalize across demographics. To test these aims, we examined psychometric properties of the Linguistic Inquiry Word Count (LIWC), a speech content measure, and the Coh-Metrix, a speech organization measure. Across baseline to six month (n = 101) and baseline to one year (n = 47) narrative speech samples, we generally observed fair reliability for speech content measures and fair to good reliability for speech organization measures. Regarding demographics, multiple speech indices varied by race, income, and education. The lack of excellent reliability scores for speech indices holds important implications for examining speech variables in clinical trials and highlights the dynamic nature of speech. This work illustrates the importance of designing speech content and speech organization measures with external validity across demographic factors. Future studies examining speech in schizophrenia should account for potential biases against demographic groups introduced by linguistic analysis tools.
  • Icono ubicación Avda. Universidades 24
    48007 Bilbao
  • Icono ubicación+34 944 139 000
  • ContactoContacto
Rights

Excepto si se señala otra cosa, la licencia del ítem se describe como:
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 License

Software DSpace copyright © 2002-2025 LYRASIS

  • Configuración de cookies
  • Enviar sugerencias