Monday, November 25, 2013

The Effects of Music on Speech Disorders

The Effects of Music on Speech Disorders
A relatively new field, it has often been questioned why music affects those with speech disorders, particularly those who stutter. Recent examples of this include American Idol contestant, Larazo Arbos. Speech pathologists say there is not yet a scientifically proven answer to the question, but there are likely a number of physiologic, genetic, environmental and social variables that play a role. One plausible explanation, said Krzysztof Izdebski, chairman of the Pacific Voice and Speech Foundation in San Francisco, is that singing relies mostly on memory. “When you speak, on the other hand, it’s more of a voluntary activity. There’s planning, thinking, reaction, et cetera. Singing requires different mechanisms,” he said. People who stutter may be unable to coordinate all the movements and processes involved in speech, he explained. “The more automatic the speech is, the less someone is likely to stutter,” added Karin Wexler, an adjunct associate professor of speech and language pathology at Columbia University’s Teachers College in New York.  The same goes for reciting a poem.  There’s no real communication involved. One might wonder is singing could be used as a normal form of communication for those who stutter if it indeed helps so much. According to the Stuttering Project at the University of Iowa, however, while people who stutter may be able to sing stutter-free, singing will rarely produce long-term fluency. Speaking also requires the voice box to work a lot more because there is repeated starting and stopping, unlike singing, which is a more continuous flow. “Getting the voice started can be a problem for someone who stutters,” she said.
The phenomenon could also be due to the differences in brain activity elicited by singing and speaking. Each is associated with a different part of the brain, and perhaps the musical signals get routed differently. It is not just stammering that gets lost when people sing. Accents tend to disappear as well. Singing is rarely spontaneous, and people learn a song and will sing it as they heard it. In fact, speaking with a different accent actually seems to help some stutterers. “If they are speaking in a different way from their ordinary way of speaking, they may become more fluent.”[1]
Music and Speech Areas of the Brain
Indeed the effects of music on speech disorders, particularly stuttering, is an amazing topic that presents very little research because it is a relatively new field of study. The research that has been produces, however, reveals that music, in fact, has a significant effect on people with such disorders. The most common thought among researchers is that words bypass the part of the brain related to speech, the frontal lobe, and moves immediately to the part of the brain related to music, particularly rhythm, the cerebellum. The following image reveals these parts of the brain:
The cerebellum can be seen in a completely different area of the brain than the frontal lobe, which is also a part of the cerebrum. The cerebellum is located at the back of the head, below the cerebrum. The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke explains that this organ is the second largest in the brain and is a vital control center for reflex actions, balance, rhythm and coordinating skeletal muscle movement.[2] The cerebellum helps to create smooth, flowing and integrated movements when hearing or playing music. It works in harmony with other parts of the brain to affect rhythmic movement in the body when moving in response to the music. The cerebellum allows a performer to move the body in accordance to reading or visualizing music when playing a musical instrument, as described by the Center for Neuroskills.[3] Researchers have revealed that the cognitive process of presenting words in one who stutters allows that the functions are carried out through the cerebellum rather than the frontal lobe when singing, particularly attributed to the effects of rhythm.
Singing
            Research has shown that music-making, singing in particular, has a dramatic effect on those who speech disorders. It is often used, in fact, as a therapeutic tool to aid in the rehabilitative process for those who have developed such a disorder from accidents or health issues such as a stroke. “Singing can serve as a valuable tool because it is a universal form of musical expression that is as natural as speaking.”[4] The common problem among those who stutter is the absence of finer tongue control. Classical vocal music training helps to coordinate the vocal chords and work on fine tongue control. Singing engages and auditory-motor feedback loop in the brain more intensely than other music making activities such as instrumental playing. From a developmental perspective, babies produce vocalizations that may be regarded as precursors for music and speech intonation, and by kindergarten age, children can sing a fairly large repertoire of songs with their performance level being similar to that of adults. Furthermore, some children even exhibit intermediate vocalizations, a type of vocal behavior that lies at the boundary between speech and song.[5] Recent research gives evidence that the therapeutic effects of singing modify the speech motor symptoms of several neurological disorders.
            The following example clearly presents brain differences in those with singing experience and those without. 
According to the image, the professional singer (b) has a more connected right and left arcuate fasciculus (AF) than the healthy nonmusician (a). In the same manner, although the left AF is absent because of a hemispheric stroke, the results of intensive melodic intonation therapy on a patient with Broca’s aphasia is evident. The right AF appears larger after therapy.
            Singing, or the act of producing musical sounds with the voice, has the potential to treat speech abnormalities because it directly stimulates the muscles associated with respiration, phonation, articulation, and resonance. Research has shown that intensive singing practice can lead to long-lasting changes in both the cardio-vascular and pulmonary systems.
Recent research is clear in the results: singing can and does have a drastic positive effect on those with neurological disorders. With this research being relatively new to the field, the challenges are great, but so potential for profound conclusions.
University of Toronto Study
            A recent study at the University of Toronto clearly reveals that music indeed has a significant effect on stuttering. The participants included 22 children (14 boys and 8 girls) studying in various schools from the ages of 7-13. All of the children had problems with stuttering. The causes of stuttering varied in the participants of the study. For some, it was emotional disturbance; for some, it was lack of freedom in expression; for some, it was inadequate vocabulary; and for some, it was having bilingual parents. It is typically thought that the speech issues in stuttering may be related to the lack of coordination of certain muscles implying that the problem is related to finer control of the tongue. As mentioned earlier, classical vocal music training helps correct this problem. In this particular study, basic vocal exercises were used (pairs, triple syllables with twist and speed, etc.). In the study, the music used was selected on the basis of the following:
1.      Easy to recite
2.      Does not require intricate knowledge of music
3.      Simple to follow
4.      Easy to train oneself

Simple reading passages were also chosen.

Findings and Conclusions
            The general positive effect of music therapy was evident in all of the participants. In the course of the study, the problem of stuttering was reduced gradually over the weeks on account of exposure to music therapy. There was also a corresponding increase in the fluency of reading among children with speech fluency as the therapy progressed over the weeks. Four boys and seven girls showed improvement in reading fluency and speech fluency. For most participants, stuttering began significantly decreasing from the fourth week of the study onward. However, for one girl, stuttering disappeared on the tenth day of the study, and reading fluency improved gradually. Except for two children, speech fluency increased from the seventh week. These two children, however, gained fluency by the ninth week but also needed further exposure to therapy sessions, suggesting that there are individual differences with regard to the improvement gained as a result of music therapy. All of these results reveal that music indeed has a profound positive effect on those who stutter.
Conclusion
                Although this field of study is relatively new, it is quite conclusive in its findings. Music has a significant effect on those with speech disorders. The potential for significant findings is great. Questions arise as to why music affects those with speech disorders in such a positive manner, leaving room for more research and more significant findings.


[1] Body Odd, “Why “Idol” Contestant’s Stutter Goes Away When He Sings,” NBC News, January 23, 2013, accessed November 13, 2013, http://www.nbcnews.com/health/why-idol-contestants-stutter-goes-away-when-he-sings-1C8086160.
[2] Noreen Kassem, “What Parts of the Brain Are Stimulated by Music,” Livestrong, accessed November 13, 2013, http://www.livestrong.com/article/175434-what-parts-of-the-brain-are-stimulated-by-music/.
[3] Ibid.
[4] Catherine Y. Wan, Theodor RĂ¼ber, Anja Hohmann, and Gottfried Schlaug, “The Therapeutic Effects of Singing in Neurological Disorders, Music Perception: An Interdisciplinary Journal, Vol. 27, No. 4 (April 2010): 287, accessed November 13, 2013.
[5] Ibid.

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Tipping: It's the Right Thing to Do

Having worked in restaurants, something has bothered me lately, and that is the skimpy tipping of those who claim to be Christians. I’ve worked as a delivery driver, which, believe it or not, is supposedly a tipped position. My experience, however, has been that when I have delivered to someone with a scripture posted on their house, the tip is usually absent or very little. It is indeed a sad situation. I know many people in the restaurant business, and it is always Sundays that are dreaded the most. It is the worst day for tips and yet the most hectic. Why is this? This should not be. How can people be stingy with their money when God has been so generous to them? A good tip does not have to be 50%, but in today’s standards, leave at least 20%. Personally I would even say leave at least 25%. For delivery drivers, leave at least $5, and on a large order over $100, leave at least 20%. Let those who profess to know Christ take a stand, be different, and leave good tips to people of service. It is the right thing to do.