Academic Journal

Automated Scoring of the Speech Intelligibility Test Using Autoscore

Bibliographic Details
Title: Automated Scoring of the Speech Intelligibility Test Using Autoscore
Authors: Kaila L. Stipancic, Tyson S. Barrett, Kris Tjaden, Stephanie A. Borrie
Source: American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology. 34:2397-2408
Publisher Information: American Speech Language Hearing Association, 2025.
Publication Year: 2025
Subject Terms: 03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine, 0305 other medical science
Description: Purpose: The purpose of the current study was to develop and test extensions to Autoscore, an automated approach for scoring listener transcriptions against target stimuli, for scoring the Speech Intelligibility Test (SIT), a widely used test for quantifying intelligibility in individuals with dysarthria. Method: Three main extensions to Autoscore were created including a compound rule, a contractions rule, and a numbers rule. We used two sets of previously collected listener SIT transcripts ( N = 4,642) from databases of dysarthric speakers to evaluate the accuracy of the Autoscore SIT extensions. A human scorer and SIT-extended Autoscore were used to score sentence transcripts in both data sets. Scoring performance was determined by (a) comparing Autoscore and human scores using intraclass correlations (ICCs) at individual sentence and speaker levels and (b) comparing SIT-extended Autoscore performance to the original Autoscore with ICCs. Results: At both the individual sentence and speaker levels, Autoscore and the human scorer were nearly identical for both Data Set 1 (ICC = .9922 and ICC = .9767, respectively) and Data Set 2 (ICC = .9934 and ICC = .9946, respectively). Where disagreements between Autoscore and a human scorer occurred, the differences were often small (i.e., within 1 or 2 points). Across the two data sets ( N = 4,642 sentences), SIT-extended Autoscore rendered 510 disagreements with the human scorer (vs. 571 disagreements for the original Autoscore). Discussion: Overall, SIT-extended Autoscore performed as well as human scorers and substantially improved scoring accuracy relative to the original version of Autoscore. Coupled with the substantial time and effort saving provided by Autoscore, its utility has been strengthened by the extensions developed and tested here.
Document Type: Article
Language: English
ISSN: 1558-9110
1058-0360
DOI: 10.1044/2024_ajslp-24-00276
Access URL: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39666687
Accession Number: edsair.doi.dedup.....2970da8724ea7c766c16c20d9201fc9b
Database: OpenAIRE
Description
ISSN:15589110
10580360
DOI:10.1044/2024_ajslp-24-00276