Journal article
American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 2021
APA
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Fujiki, R. B., & Thibeault, S. (2021). The Relationship Between Auditory-Perceptual Rating Scales and Objective Voice Measures in Children With Voice Disorders. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology.
Chicago/Turabian
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Fujiki, Robert Brinton, and Susan Thibeault. “The Relationship Between Auditory-Perceptual Rating Scales and Objective Voice Measures in Children With Voice Disorders.” American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology (2021).
MLA
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Fujiki, Robert Brinton, and Susan Thibeault. “The Relationship Between Auditory-Perceptual Rating Scales and Objective Voice Measures in Children With Voice Disorders.” American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 2021.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{robert2021a,
title = {The Relationship Between Auditory-Perceptual Rating Scales and Objective Voice Measures in Children With Voice Disorders.},
year = {2021},
journal = {American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology},
author = {Fujiki, Robert Brinton and Thibeault, Susan}
}
Purpose The purpose of this study was to determine concurrent validity of the Grade, Roughness, Breathiness, Asthenia, and Strain (GRBAS) and Consensus Auditory-Perceptual Evaluation of Voice (CAPE-V) auditory-perceptual scales in children with voice disorders. A secondary purpose was to determine correlation between the GRBAS, CAPE-V, and objective voice measures. Method GRBAS and CAPE-V ratings and acoustic and aerodynamic measures were collected from the University of Wisconsin-Madison Voice and Swallow Outcomes Database. Correlations between CAPE-V and GRBAS ratings were calculated for overall severity of dysphonia, roughness, breathiness, and strain. Correlations between auditory-perceptual voice ratings and objective voice measures were also examined. Results One hundred thirty GRBAS and CAPE-V auditory-perceptual ratings were significantly correlated for overall severity, roughness, breathiness, and strain. r 2 values were highest for overall severity of dysphonia (r 2 = .75) and lowest for strain (r 2 = .54). CAPE-V and GRBAS ratings were largely associated with similar acoustic and aerodynamic measures. The highest correlations were observed for auditory-perceptual ratings of breathiness and jitter% (CAPE-V r 2 = .44, GRBAS r 2 = .44), shimmer% (CAPE-V r 2 = .45, GRBAS r 2 = .45), noise-to-harmonic ratio (CAPE-V r 2 = .42, GRBAS r 2 = .40), fundamental frequency (CAPE-V r 2 = .47, GRBAS r 2 = .44), and maximum phonation time (CAPE-V r 2 = .56, GRBAS r 2 = .51). Akaike information criterion values indicated that CAPE-V ratings were more strongly correlated with objective voice measures than GRBAS ratings. Conclusions CAPE-V and GRBAS scales have concurrent validity in children with voice disorders. CAPE-V ratings are more strongly correlated with acoustic and aerodynamic voice measures.