Scientific News Philosofy Psychology Woman aquires new accent after stroke. Rare case of foreign-accent syndrome reported in Canada.
Woman
aquires new accent after stroke. Rare case of foreign-accent syndrome reported
in Canada.
A woman in southern Ontario is one
of the first cases in Canada of a rare neurological syndrome in which a person
starts speaking with a different accent, McMaster University researchers report
in the July issue of the Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences.
The puzzling medical phenomenon
known as foreign-accent syndrome (FAS) arises from neurological damage, and
results in vocal distortions that typically sound like the speaker has a new,
"foreign" accent.
This particular case, however, is
even more unusual because the English-speaking woman did not acquire an accent
that sounds foreign but one that instead sounds like Maritime Canadian English.
The woman, referred to here as
Rosemary, was recovering from a stroke two years ago, when her family noticed a
change in her speech. They asked medical personnel at the Integrated Stroke Unit
of Hamilton General Hospital why their mother was suddenly speaking with what
sounded like a Newfoundland accent. It was at that point that the medical team
joined forces with researchers in McMaster's Cognitive Science of Language
program to study the case.
"It is a fascinating case
because this woman has never visited the Maritimes, nor has she been exposed to
anyone with an East Coast accent," says one of the study's authors,
Alexandre Sévigny, associate professor of cognitive science in the Department
of Communication Studies & Multimedia at McMaster University. "Her
family lineage is Irish and Danish, and neither of her parents ever lived
anywhere but in southern Ontario."
Karin Humphreys, the principal
investigator in the study, and an assistant professor in McMaster's Department
of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour at McMaster University, says that
while the new accent was apparent to the woman's family the woman could not
detect the changes herself. Despite intensive speech therapy the new accent
persists, even two years later.
"Rosemary's speech is perfectly
clear, unlike most stroke victims who have damage to speech-motor areas of the
brain," says Humphreys. "You wouldn't guess that the speech changes
are the result of a stroke. Most people meeting her for the first time assume
she is from out East. What we are seeing in this case is a change in some of the
very precise mechanisms of speech-motor planning in the brain's circuitry."
Sévigny says Rosemary's speech
after the stroke became slow, and included changes in phonological segments (using
"dat" for "that", and "tink" for "think")
as well as the opening of some vowels and diphthongs ("greasy" was
pronounced "gracey", and "dog" was pronounced to rhyme with
"rogue".)
Humphreys says the research makes
her wonder whether FAS might be under-reported because doctors rely on family
members to alert them to speech changes post-stroke.
###
Contact: Jane Christmas
chrisja@mcmaster.ca
905-525-9140
McMaster University
Publishing date: July 21, 2008
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