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Individuals with right temporal frontotemporal dementia (rtFTD) showed increased interpersonal speech rate correlation during conversations, unlike those with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD). This suggests altered communication accommodation in rtFTD.

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Area of Science:

  • Neurolinguistics
  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Psychology

Background:

  • Communication accommodation involves adjusting speech patterns to match conversational partners.
  • Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) encompasses neurodegenerative disorders affecting social cognition and language.
  • Behavioral variant FTD (bvFTD) and right temporal FTD (rtFTD) present distinct clinical and neural profiles.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate interpersonal prosodic and speech timing correlations in individuals with bvFTD and rtFTD compared to healthy controls.
  • To examine how FTD subtypes affect the ability to adapt communicative style during dyadic interactions.
  • To explore the neural underpinnings of communication accommodation deficits in FTD.

Main Methods:

  • Analysis of conversational speech samples from patients with bvFTD, rtFTD, and healthy controls.
  • Measurement of interpersonal correlations in prosodic features (pitch) and speech timing (speech rate).
  • Statistical comparison of correlation coefficients across the different participant groups.

Main Results:

  • No significant differences in interpersonal prosodic or speech rate correlations were found in bvFTD compared to controls.
  • Conversations involving individuals with rtFTD exhibited significantly higher interpersonal correlations in speech rate than those of healthy controls.
  • Pitch and timing correlations did not differ significantly between rtFTD and control groups.

Conclusions:

  • bvFTD does not appear to significantly impact interpersonal speech accommodation in terms of prosody or timing.
  • rtFTD may be associated with an increase in interpersonal speech rate synchrony, potentially linked to preserved speech production mechanisms but impaired social semantic processing.
  • These findings contribute to understanding the nuanced effects of FTD subtypes on social communication and interaction.