Actively Recruiting

Phase Not Applicable
Age: 21Years - 75Years
All Genders
Healthy Volunteers
NCT04742894

Neural Bases of Vocal Sensorimotor Impairment in Aphasia

Led by The University of Texas at Dallas · Updated on 2025-06-10

100

Participants Needed

3

Research Sites

241 weeks

Total Duration

On this page

Sponsors

T

The University of Texas at Dallas

Lead Sponsor

N

National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)

Collaborating Sponsor

AI-Summary

What this Trial Is About

Aphasia is the most common type of post-stroke communication disorder characterized by deficits in speech comprehension, production and control. While recovery can be promoted with speech therapy, improvement remains modest and typically requires a large number of sessions contributing to rising health care costs. Traditional aphasia therapy focus on enhancing speech motor output; however, recent evidence suggests that the auditory feedback also plays a critical role in fluent speech. Therefore, a key step toward refining treatment strategies is to develop objective biomarkers that can probe the integrity of sensorimotor mechanisms of speech auditory feedback and identify their impaired function in patients with post-stroke aphasia. This study aims to examine the behavioral, neurophysiological (EEG), and neuroimaging (fMRI) biomarkers of speech impairment following stroke with focus on understanding the role of auditory feedback for speech production and control. We plan to test individuals with post-stroke aphasia and a matched neuroptypical control group during different speech production tasks under the altered auditory feedback paradigm. In addition, we aim to examine the effect of audio-visual feedback training on enhancing communication ability during speech. These biomarkers will be combined with existing lesion-symptom-mapping data in the aphasic group in order to identify the patterns of brain damage and diminished structural connectivity within the auditory-motor areas of the left hemisphere that predict impaired sensorimotor processing of speech in aphasia. The long-term goal of this research is to develop a model for identifying the source of sensorimotor deficit and improve diagnosis and targeted treatment of speech disorders in aphasia.

CONDITIONS

Official Title

Neural Bases of Vocal Sensorimotor Impairment in Aphasia

Who Can Participate

Age: 21Years - 75Years
All Genders
Healthy Volunteers

Eligibility Criteria

Eligible

You may qualify if you...

  • Adults aged 21 to 75 years
  • Right-handed individuals
  • Native English speakers
  • Individuals with aphasia due to chronic left hemisphere stroke (more than 6 months post-stroke)
  • Aphasic participants previously diagnosed with types of aphasia such as Broca's, Wernicke's, conduction, or anomic
  • Control subjects with normal voice, speech, language, and hearing function and no history of neurological or psychiatric disorder
Not Eligible

You will not qualify if you...

  • Individuals with moderate to severe hearing impairments
  • Individuals with moderate to severe memory impairments
  • Individuals with moderate to severe cognitive impairments
  • History of peripheral laryngeal disorders, such as paresis or vocal fold paralysis
  • Any contraindications for EEG or MRI scanning based on safety screening

AI-Screening

AI-Powered Screening

Complete this quick 3-step screening to check your eligibility

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Trial Site Locations

Total: 3 locations

1

University of California Irvine

Irvine, California, United States, 92697

Not Yet Recruiting

2

University of South Carolina

Columbia, South Carolina, United States, 29208

Not Yet Recruiting

3

The University of Texas at Dallas

Richardson, Texas, United States, 75080

Actively Recruiting

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Research Team

R

Roozbeh Behroozmand, PhD

CONTACT

How is the study designed?

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Masking

SINGLE

Allocation

RANDOMIZED

Model

PARALLEL

Primary Purpose

BASIC_SCIENCE

Number of Arms

2

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