Southwest Health Engagement & Research Collaborative
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  • PPP Year 6: Duval, Addressing Speech Health Equity Issues in the Southwestern US Using a Telehealth Speech Therapy Game

Pilot Project, Year 6

Addressing Speech Health Equity Issues in the Southwestern US Using a Telehealth Speech Therapy Game

This project will address the needs of people who receive, give, or are affected by speech therapy. Anyone using speech to communicate on a daily basis can likely imagine the difficulty, uncertainty, and anxiety they might experience with a speech impairment. Research has shown that people with speech impairments often have lower income, delayed independence, symptoms of depression, and lower social skills. Speech is a skill that often improves with speech therapy, but up to 70% of speech-language pathologists in the US have waiting lists, indicating a workforce shortage. Lack of intervention services disproportionately affects Blacks, Hispanics, and Women. SpokeIt is the first and only speech therapy game capable of diagnosing speech errors in children born with an orofacial cleft, including articulation, compensatory, and resonance errors.

Study aims

  1. Test whether SpokeIt can accurately diagnose cleft speech errors without biases against Hispanic and Indigenous populations’ accents in the Southwest US and
  2. Gather preliminary data for an R01 application to examine the longitudinal efficacy of SpokeIt.

Our long-term goal is to provide clinically accurate and effective telehealth interventions for cleft speech therapy to underserved populations with limited resources. Our central hypothesis is that the underlying machine learning models and speech recognition systems in SpokeIt have a higher incidence of false positives when diagnosing common cleft speech errors for people with an accent. The rationale is that this work will increase confidence that biases are removed from SpokeIt’s diagnostics before proposing an R01 largescale longitudinal efficacy study.

Funding: The study is funded by NIMHD/NIH 5U54MD012388


About the investigators

A photo of Jared Duval who has short brown hair, is wearing glasses and a blue suit jacket over a checked shirt.

 

Jared Duval, PhD

Principal Investigator
Assistant Professor, School of Informatics, Computing, and Cyber Systems
Interests: HCI, Serious Games for Health, Play, Games, Assistive Technology, Disability
Email: Jared.Duval@nau.edu

Headshot for Morgan Vigil-Hayes from Northern Arizona University.

Morgan Vigil-Hayes, PhD

Co-Investigator
Associate Professor, School of Informatics, Computing, and Cyber Systems
Interests: Network and data analytics, Community-centric network design, People-centric network design, Networks in resource-limited contexts, Information technology and society
Email: morgan.vigil-hayes@nau.edu

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Southwest Health Engagement and Research Collaborative
Location
Room 120 Building 56
Applied Research & Development
1395 S Knoles Dr.
Flagstaff, Arizona 86011
Mailing Address
PO Box 4065
Flagstaff, Arizona 86011
Email
SHERC@nau.edu
Phone
928-523-5068
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