Title :
A comparison of syntax, semantics, and pragmatics in spoken language among residents with Alzheimer´s disease in managed-care facilities
Author :
Guinn, Curry ; Singer, Ben ; Habash, Anthony
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., UNC, Wilmington, NC, USA
Abstract :
This research is a discriminative analysis of conversational dialogues involving individuals suffering from dementia of Alzheimer´s type. Several metric analyses are applied to the transcripts of the Carolina Conversation Corpus in order to determine if there are significant statistical differences between individuals with and without Alzheimer´s disease. Our prior research suggests that there exist measurable linguistic differences between managed-care residents diagnosed with Alzheimer´s disease and their caregivers. This paper presents results comparing managed-care residents diagnosed with Alzheimer´s disease to other managed-care residents. Results from the analysis indicate that part-of-speech and lexical richness statistics may not be good distinguishing attributes. However, go-ahead utterances and certain fluency measures provide defensible means of differentiating the linguistic characteristics of spontaneous speech between individuals that are and are not diagnosed with Alzheimer´s disease. Two machine learning algorithms were able to classify the speech of individuals with and without dementia of the Alzheimer´s type with accuracy up to 80%.
Keywords :
diseases; health care; learning (artificial intelligence); natural language processing; patient diagnosis; pattern classification; programming language semantics; speech; speech processing; statistical analysis; Alzheimer disease; Carolina Conversation Corpus; caregivers; conversational dialogues; dementia; diagnosis; discriminative analysis; fluency measures; go-ahead utterances; lexical richness statistics; linguistic differences; machine learning algorithms; managed-care facilities; managed-care residents; metric analyses; part-of-speech; pragmatics; semantics; speech classification; spoken language; spontaneous speech; statistical differences; syntax; Degradation; Dementia; Measurement; Speech; Vocabulary; Alzheimer´s disease; NLP in healthcare; Natural language processing; text classification;
Conference_Titel :
Computational Intelligence in Healthcare and e-health (CICARE), 2014 IEEE Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Orlando, FL
DOI :
10.1109/CICARE.2014.7007840