The Accuracy of Speech and Linguistic Analysis in Early Diagnostics of Neurocognitive Disorders in a Memory Clinic Setting

D. ter Huurne*, I. Ramakers*, N. Possemis, L. Banning, A. Gruters, S. Van Asbroeck, A. Konig, N. Linz, J. Troger, K. Langel, F. Verhey, M. de Vugt

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Objective To investigate whether automatic analysis of the Semantic Verbal Fluency test (SVF) is reliable and can extract additional information that is of value for identifying neurocognitive disorders. In addition, the associations between the automatically derived speech and linguistic features and other cognitive domains were explored. Method We included 135 participants from the memory clinic of the Maastricht University Medical Center+ (with Subjective Cognitive Decline [SCD; N = 69] and Mild Cognitive Impairment [MCI]/dementia [N = 66]). The SVF task (one minute, category animals) was recorded and processed via a mobile application, and speech and linguistic features were automatically extracted. The diagnostic performance of the automatically derived features was investigated by training machine learning classifiers to differentiate SCD and MCI/dementia participants. Results The intraclass correlation for interrater reliability between the clinical total score (golden standard) and automatically derived total word count was 0.84. The full model including the total word count and the automatically derived speech and linguistic features had an Area Under the Curve (AUC) of 0.85 for differentiating between people with SCD and MCI/dementia. The model with total word count only and the model with total word count corrected for age showed an AUC of 0.75 and 0.81, respectively. Semantic switching correlated moderately with memory as well as executive functioning. Conclusion The one-minute SVF task with automatically derived speech and linguistic features was as reliable as the manual scoring and differentiated well between SCD and MCI/dementia. This can be considered as a valuable addition in the screening of neurocognitive disorders and in clinical practice.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)667-676
Number of pages10
JournalArchives of Clinical Neuropsychology
Volume38
Issue number5
Early online date1 Jan 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 25 Jul 2023

Keywords

  • Alzheimer disease
  • Cognitive dysfunction
  • Neuropsychological tests
  • Speech
  • MILD COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT
  • VERBAL FLUENCY
  • ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE
  • PARKINSONS-DISEASE
  • NORMATIVE DATA
  • PERFORMANCE
  • AGE
  • PARTICIPANTS
  • EDUCATION
  • TESTS

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